China’s luxury spending forecast to boost global sales in 2026 despite headwinds

Analysts forecast accelerated growth for the global luxury sector in 2026, with China’s consumer spending rebound as a key driver despite challenges from a volatile property market and oil shocks from the war in Iran. HSBC, Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas predict global sales growth of 5.5 to 6 per cent.

The luxury industry is forecast to accelerate in 2026 after a relatively stagnant 2025, with China’s long-awaited recovery emerging as a pivotal factor even as the war in Iran casts a shadow over global markets, according to analysts.

“We believe it is time to look at the sector, as we think the organic sales growth rate should further accelerate in 2026 and return to growth after two years of more muted sales growth rates … mostly driven by the two key drivers of growth: the US and China,” wrote HSBC analysts led by Anne-Laure Bismuth in a March 30 note.

Despite the war in Iran and turmoil in global energy markets, HSBC held its forecasts for mainland China at 8 per cent and the United States at 10 per cent, while cutting Europe from 4 to 2.5 per cent and revising the Middle East from 6 per cent growth to a 5 per cent decline.

Deutsche Bank analysts agreed that China’s recovery would be a crucial driver for the sector this year but cautioned that it might be “volatile” as the country’s economy faces challenges, notably the lingering property crisis.

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Realistic illustration of China's 2026 Two Sessions press conference highlighting GDP growth targets and leaders including Premier Li Qiang and Xi Jinping.
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Economy press conference highlights from China's 2026 Two Sessions

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Following Premier Li Qiang's government work report setting a 2026 GDP growth target of 4.5-5%, Zheng Shanjie of the National Development and Reform Commission projected over 6 trillion yuan GDP growth this year at the NPC economy press conference. The service sector is expected to exceed 100 trillion yuan during the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030). Leaders including Xi Jinping emphasized high-quality development amid the sessions.

China's foreign trade rose 18.3 percent year-on-year to 7.73 trillion yuan in the first two months of 2026, economists say this will underpin the country's growth target and provide stability for the global economy. Exports increased 19.2 percent, while imports grew 17.1 percent, reflecting improved global demand and domestic industrial strengths.

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China's first batch of hard economic activity data for 2026 exceeded downbeat forecasts, reports Seeking Alpha. Analysts note more work is required to support domestic growth amid rising inflation risks.

Logistics giant DHL expects revenues to soar by 2030, driven largely by Chinese companies' global ambitions, even amid disruptions from the US-Israel war on Iran and unpredictable tariffs. Oscar de Bok, CEO of its global forwarding and freight business, highlighted China's crucial supply chain role in a Shanghai interview.

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Chanel posted revenues of $19.3 billion in 2025, marking a 1.8 percent rise on a constant currency basis. Operating profit climbed 5.2 percent to $4.7 billion as the French luxury house recovered from a sales drop in 2024.

China's state-run Economic Daily has published back-to-back front-page editorials rejecting claims that its economy is losing steam and causing a global 'China shock 2.0'. The outlet argues that rising protectionism, not China's strong exports, is the real global economic problem. It describes the 4.5 to 5 per cent growth target as a 'reasonable range'.

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China's consumer price index rose 0.8 percent in the first two months of 2026, driven by a surge in spending during an extended Chinese New Year holiday. However, analysts remain concerned about long-term deflation risks.

 

 

 

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