Fashion Remains Cautious on President-elect Trump While Wall Street Celebrates

Story was updated at 5:38 p.m. EST

Wall Street welcomed back Donald Trump as president-elect — but fashion was feeling more reticent.

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average shot up 3.6 percent, or 1,508.05 points to 43,729.93 after Trump beat out his Democratic challenger Vice President Kamala Harris early Wednesday morning. He will return the White House to Republican hands in January, when the Senate will also flip to the GOP. The race to control the House — the last chance for divided government in Washington — remained up in the air as of press time.

Fashion stocks joined in some of the rally. The gainers included Capri Holdings up 7.2 percent to $22; Signet Jewelers, 6.1 percent to $97.30; Macy’s Inc., 5.2 percent to $16.09 and Amazon.com Inc., 3.8 percent to $207.09.

But the wider industry was more muted. Designers often have more liberal social leanings and were very much on Team Kamala, donating to her campaign and rallying in New York with First Lady Jill Biden to get out the vote.

Harris conceded the election and addressed supporters at her alma mater, Howard University, on Wednesday afternoon, saying that she had congratulated Trump on his win and underscoring the importance of a peaceful transfer of power.

“While I conceded this election, I don’t concede the fight that fueled this campaign,” she said. “The fight for freedom, for opportunity, fairness and the dignity of all people.”

Vice President Kamala Harris
Vice President Kamala Harris

The fashion industry remained cautious of Trump 2.0 with lobbying groups both reaching out to cooperate with the incoming administration and stressing the need to avoid any more costly and chaotic trade wars.

While avoiding any new tariffs is at the top of the import-heavy fashion industry’s agenda, broader forces are at work and Trump’s second election moves America into a new and uncertain time.

The campaign was bitter, filled with dark rhetoric and an assassination attempt, with Trump altogether promising a much more comprehensive reordering of the federal government than he accomplished in his first term.

That will ripple across the geopolitical and business landscape — from how antitrust watchdogs regulate corporate takeovers to whether the U.S. continues to support Ukraine in the face of a Russian assault.

While Trump’s supporters rejoiced at the change, many others braced for what comes next.