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Luxury Giants Brace for 50% Sales Collapse in Middle East Amid Escalating Iran Conflict

Analysis by Declan Cross | Ticker: 2026-03-20 at 20:56 | 2 MIN READ
Luxury Giants Brace for 50% Sales Collapse in Middle East Amid Escalating Iran Conflict
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The Middle East’s booming luxury market faces a sudden and severe contraction as the Iran conflict drives away tourists and slashes retail traffic. Hugo Boss CEO Daniel Grieder confirmed the immediate impact during an earnings call, noting that reduced tourist numbers are hurting store performance and shopping center activity across the region. A recent Bernstein Research report predicts luxury sales in the Middle East could plunge by 50% this month, largely due to declining tourism and travel. While executives at Prada and Salvatore Ferragamo report no immediate fallout yet, the sector’s rapid growth—6% to 8% organic expansion compared to a stagnant global luxury market—makes the potential downturn more pronounced. Bernstein analyst Luca Solca warned that if the war drags on and oil prices stay elevated, the risk of a global recession increases, which would hit luxury goods as a discretionary sector. Luxury brands have heavily invested in the region, with Dior and Gucci each deriving about 20% of sales from Middle East airports in Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi. Wealth in the area has surged, with ultra-high-net-worth individuals seeing their fortunes double from $1.6 trillion to $3 trillion between 2019 and 2022. RBC Capital analyst Tom Narayan highlighted the Middle East as a high-margin market, especially for luxury supercars, where buyers favor top-tier, profitable models. However, some brands are already adjusting: Ferrari and Maserati have suspended shipments to the region, though the Middle East accounts for just 4.6% of Ferrari’s global deliveries. Bernstein cautions that prolonged conflict could cut regional sales by 30% due to reduced travel, higher energy costs, and recession fears. Analysts warn that elevated oil prices through 2027 could further strain consumer spending and make a global downturn more likely, threatening luxury demand worldwide.

Intel provided by: Declan Cross
Interim Market Researcher
(Note: Declan Cross is covering this desk while Arthur Sterling is on special assignment.)
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