Jennifer Saunders and Joanna Lumley as Edina and Patsy in Absolutely Fabulous helped turn Harvey Nichols into a cultural icon of British luxury retail. Three decades on, that brand equity may prove just as valuable to Next plc as the stores themselves. Jennifer Saunders (left) and Joanna Lumley smoking cigarettes on the set of the television sitcom ‘Absolutely Fabulous’, May 21st 1993. (Photo by Don Smith/Radio Times/Getty Images)
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The prospect of Next plc acquiring Harvey Nichols May initially feel like an unlikely pairing for some.
One built its reputation on dependable high-street fashion, disciplined operations and remarkable financial consistency. The other became synonymous with luxury retail, designer fashion and the glamour of Knightsbridge, helping redefine department store shopping during the 1990’s and became an icon of high fashion and ‘Absolutely Fabulous’ punch-lines.
On the surface, they occupy very different worlds.
Look more closely, however, and this potential acquisition says far less about luxury retail than it does about what Next has quietly become.
For years, many consumers have continued to think of Next as a clothing retailer, yet those of us behind the scenes understand the power of this retail tour de force.
Next – Behind The Scenes
Today’s Next is one of Britain’s most sophisticated retail operating businesses, generating almost £900 million in annual profit and building a market value of more than £17 billion through technology, logistics, data and operational discipline rather than fashion alone.
Its Total Platform business has become one of the most significant developments in British retail, providing e-commerce infrastructure, fulfilment, payments, warehousing and digital capabilities for an expanding portfolio of brands. Retail businesses increasingly partner with Next to access systems that would take years and hundreds of millions of pounds to build independently.
Harvey Nichols – The Opportunity
Harvey Nichols’ recent financial performance has been difficult. Revenues have fallen to just over £200 million, losses have continued for five consecutive years and recent reports of a winding-up petition, although resolved, offered an uncomfortable glimpse into the pressures facing even the most prestigious retail names.
Yet financial weakness does not necessarily mean a weak brand.
Harvey Nichols remains one of Britain’s most recognisable luxury retail businesses. For almost two centuries it has built international awareness, an affluent customer base and a reputation that extends far beyond its seven UK and Irish stores.
That is precisely the type of asset Next increasingly understands how to unlock.
Its recent acquisitions tell a remarkably consistent story.
Next’s Power-Play
Next’s acquisition strategy has followed a remarkably disciplined pattern:
- Lipsy (2008): An early proof that distinct fashion brands could retain their identity while benefiting from Next’s digital infrastructure.
- Reiss (2021–2023): Acquired a majority stake before migrating the business onto Total Platform, preserving its premium positioning while improving operational efficiency.
- Joules (2022): Rescued from administration, retaining a loyal customer base while rebuilding the business behind the scenes.
- FatFace (2023): Purchased a 97% stake, keeping the brand’s personality intact while integrating fulfilment and digital operations.
- Cath Kidston (2023): Acquired the intellectual property, giving the much-loved British brand a new digital future through Next’s ecosystem.
- Made.com (2023): Added a recognised homeware name to strengthen its growing lifestyle portfolio.
- Russell & Bromley (2026): Acquired from administration, keeping flagship locations while removing expensive liabilities and modernising the operating model.
- Harvey Nichols (proposed): The boldest move yet, potentially bringing one of Britain’s best-known luxury retailers into the same operational ecosystem.
This isn’t an opportunistic shopping spree. It’s a blueprint. Consumers continue shopping with the brands they know and trust, while Next quietly replaces the infrastructure beneath them with technology, fulfilment, payments and digital capabilities that would be prohibitively expensive for many businesses to build independently.
Harvey Nichols would represent the first time that blueprint has been applied at the very top of the market. Until now, Next has steadily built a portfolio spanning accessible fashion, premium apparel and lifestyle brands. Harvey Nichols could extend that journey into luxury beauty, designer fashion and fine food & wine, allowing Next to accompany customers through almost every stage of their spending lives without asking them to leave its wider ecosystem.
Next rarely acquires businesses to make them look more like Next. Instead, it rebuilds the commercial engine beneath them while allowing the customer-facing brand to retain its own identity.
The Next Midas Touch
Rather than serving one segment of the market, Next is steadily building a portfolio that follows consumers throughout their spending lives. A customer may begin buying children’s clothing from Next, graduate to Reiss for workwear, invest in Russell & Bromley footwear and then may stretch to shop Harvey Nichols for luxury beauty, designer fashion or fine wine. Very few retailers have successfully built that progression without diluting individual brands.
Underpinning much of this is a business consumers rarely think about. Next has quietly developed one of the UK’s most established retail credit operations through Next Pay, generating recurring income while making purchasing remarkably frictionless. Combined with Total Platform, it creates an ecosystem that extends well beyond clothing, giving Next commercial advantages that many traditional retailers simply cannot replicate.
Harvey Nichols, by contrast, brings something Next cannot build overnight – a heritage in luxury and extravagance.
A luxury reputation developed over almost 200 years. Relationships with many of the world’s most prestigious fashion houses. A flagship store recognised internationally. Those assets remain valuable even after five consecutive years of losses.
That is why this deal deserves attention.
Most headlines describe it as a high-street retailer buying a luxury department store.
In reality, it is a retail platform acquiring another premium brand to strengthen an ecosystem that has been quietly taking shape for years.
Whether the acquisition happens or not, the direction of travel is becoming increasingly clear. The globe’s most successful, sizeable retailers are no longer simply selling product.
They are building platforms powerful enough to support many different brands, many different customers, become masters of data and, increasingly, personalise every stage of the consumer journey.

