Cucinelli Says It Resumed Shipments to Saks at End of January

Cucinelli Says It Resumed Shipments to Saks at End of January

Italian luxury group Brunello Cucinelli said it resumed shipments to Saks Global at the end of January, receiving regular payments, and saw no financial hit in 2026 from the US luxury retailer’s bankruptcy.

Saks Global — owner of Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, Bergdorf Goodman and Saks ​Off ⁠5TH — filed for Chapter 11 creditor protection in mid‑January as it struggled ⁠under a debt load stemming from Saks owner Hudson’s Bay Company’s acquisition of Neiman Marcus in late 2024.

“Saks, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf ​Goodman are three great brands with beautiful locations. … We’ve never lost a dollar with them. … I don’t want to say anything about their ​merger decision, for us it’s three distinct brands,” executive ⁠chairman Brunello Cucinelli told analysts.

The company has worked with Saks, Neiman Marcus ⁠and Bergdorf Goodman for more than 30 years under a retail strategy heavily reliant on department ‌stores.

It said sales of its products ​at all the chains continued to grow in early 2026, with clients spending more overall ⁠and per single item.

“From the end of January, we resumed regular shipments of our Spring/Summer ‌2026 collection, receiving regular payments,” the company said.

Cucinelli said ​he would ‌meet with Saks executives in Milan next week.

The recent closure of some Saks Global ‌stores has only a “marginal” effect on Cucinelli’s distribution, ⁠the ⁠company said, because its business has historically been concentrated in the most important locations.

It welcomed Saks Global’s shift toward a more selective network.

Cucinelli booked an extraordinary provision of 8.1 million euros in 2025 related to the bankruptcy. It ​said there would be no impact on 2026, when it expects to post ⁠an around ‌10 percent rise in revenue at constant exchange rates.

By ‌Valentina Za; Editor: Kirsten Donovan

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