Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

This Week: Tariffs and TikTok, 24/7

After a brief reprieve, it’ll be all Trump, all the time for the fashion industry as the administration rolls out new tariffs and tries to get a TikTok sale over the line.
This week could see President Donald Trump raise tariffs on many countries and lower than on China to secure a TikTok sale.
This week could see President Donald Trump raise tariffs on many countries and lower than on China to secure a TikTok sale. (CFOTO)

The fashion industry’s had a bit of a breather from the political news cycle lately as the Trump administration was consumed with damage control over inadvertently inviting a journalist into a group chat to discuss sensitive war plans.

This week, break’s over. President Donald Trump is expected to announce long-promised “reciprocal” tariffs on countries where the US regularly runs up trade deficits. Among them are Vietnam, the No. 2 clothing and footwear exporter to the US after China, and the European Union, which sends over containers full of luxury handbags, shoes and ready to wear.

Trump’s approach to trade has made the usual tariff playbook – move production out of affected countries, raise prices in stores – obsolete. After all, Vietnam was supposed to be the America-friendly alternative to China’s rising costs and escalating tensions with the US. And it’s hard to pass along costs to consumers when you don’t know what those costs will be from week to week.

This ambiguity can be seen in brands’ responses to tariffs: A few, including Hermès and Steve Madden, have said they’ll raise prices, while American Eagle and others say they won’t. On Thursday, H&M chief executive Daniel Ervér said the fast fashion retailer would move production to avoid tariffs, but didn’t offer specifics.

ADVERTISEMENT

For more on how the industry is responding, as well as strategies for how businesses can cope, keep an eye out on Monday for BoF’s latest Memo on all things tariffs, available to Executive subscribers.

TikTok’s Clock Never Stops

As if the tariffs weren’t enough, TikTok’s reprieve from a US ban is set to expire on Saturday, April 5. To recap: Congress passed a law last year forcing TikTok’s Chinese owners to sell the video platform or face a ban. TikTok was briefly unavailable in app stores for one memorable weekend in January, but Trump extended the deadline for a sale to April 5.

The smart money is betting TikTok will be sold, perhaps to Larry Ellison’s Oracle. (Polymarket, a site that accepts wagers on news events, gives a 77 percent chance TikTok will be available on app stores on May 1, implying either a sale or further delays.) What’s missing is a nod from China’s government, which would need to approve a deal. On Thursday, Trump sweetened the pot, saying he’d potentially lower tariffs and/or extend the deadline to move a sale along.

Unlike with tariffs, the playbook for brands and influencers is pretty clear: Assume TikTok isn’t going anywhere, but make sure to tend to your followings on Instagram and YouTube, just in case.

The Week Ahead wants to hear from you! Send tips, suggestions, complaints and compliments to brian.baskin@businessoffashion.com.

© 2025 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Retail
Analysis and advice from the front lines of the retail transformation.

Dairy Boy Brings a Connecticut Farmhouse to Soho

The influencer Paige Lorenze opened her third pop-up in New York City over the weekend, selling fleeces, barn jackets and more to thousands of fans who have bought into her Gen-Z-friendly vision of New England-inspired Americana.


This Week: Off-Price’s Moment to Shine

Rising prices and a gloomy economic outlook are usually good news for discount retailers. The two biggest US players in the space, T.J. Maxx and Ross, report results this week.


view more
Latest News & Analysis
Unrivalled, world class journalism across fashion, luxury and beauty industries.

‘Vibe Marketing’ Is Taking Over Beauty. What Is It?

Generative AI is being adopted across the beauty industry to create everything from product images to formulas themselves, based on prompted “vibes.” As more companies utilise these tools for efficiency, they risk losing the creative touch that separates storytelling from slop.


Inside Falmouth University’s Online MA in Sustainable Fashion

The institution is fostering a new generation of fashion practitioners with the skills to address one of the industry’s most significant challenges: sustainability. To learn more, BoF sits down with the course leader of Falmouth University’s online MA in Sustainable Fashion, Tom Crisp.


Dairy Boy Brings a Connecticut Farmhouse to Soho

The influencer Paige Lorenze opened her third pop-up in New York City over the weekend, selling fleeces, barn jackets and more to thousands of fans who have bought into her Gen-Z-friendly vision of New England-inspired Americana.


VIEW MORE

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON