Adrian Appiolaza has left Moschino after presenting just one full collection for the Italian house, parent company Aeffe confirmed this week. No successor has been named. No transition timeline has been disclosed.
Appiolaza joined Moschino in early 2024 after a stint at Marcelo Burlon's County of Milan and prior roles at Alexander Wang and Tom Ford. His debut collection for Moschino showed in September 2024 during Milan Fashion Week. The collection received measured industry response—neutral trade coverage, no wholesale momentum reported by multi-brand buyers interviewed by trade press at the time. Aeffe's Q3 2024 earnings, released in November, showed Moschino revenue flat year-over-year at approximately €47 million, with operating margin compression of 190 basis points. The company attributed the margin pressure to "creative repositioning investments" without elaboration. Appiolaza's exit comes six months after that debut, a shorter tenure than the typical 18-24 month creative-director cycle luxury conglomerates privately budget for new hires.
This marks Moschino's third creative leadership change since founder Franco Moschino's death in 1994. Jeremy Scott held the role for a decade until February 2023, during which Moschino's revenue grew from approximately €80 million to €197 million in 2022, according to Aeffe disclosures. That growth came largely from logo-product expansion and influencer-marketing velocity in Asia-Pacific markets, particularly China and South Korea. Scott's departure reset the brand's commercial trajectory. Aeffe has not disclosed Moschino's standalone EBITDA, but luxury-sector analysts estimate the label operates at mid-single-digit margins, well below the 18-22% range of similarly positioned Italian houses under conglomerate ownership. The Appiolaza hiring and exit suggest Aeffe is struggling to define a post-Scott creative vision that sustains both editorial relevance and accessible-luxury margin structure. Moschino's wholesale partnerships remain concentrated in department-store channels—Nordstrom, Harrods, Lane Crawford—that are themselves under margin pressure and reducing SKU counts by 15-20% year-over-year, according to buyers.
For luxury hospitality operators and family-office allocators with exposure to Italian fashion real estate or Aeffe equity, this signals elevated brand-value risk. Moschino licenses generate approximately €12-15 million annually in royalty revenue for Aeffe, primarily from eyewear and fragrance partnerships. Those agreements typically include creative-approval clauses and minimum-guarantee structures that reset during leadership transitions. If Aeffe takes longer than six months to name a successor, fragrance partner Euroitalia and eyewear licensee Safilo may trigger renegotiation windows. Separately, Moschino's flagship lease at Via Sant'Andrea 12 in Milan's Quadrilatero della Moda reportedly comes up for renewal in late 2025. Landlords in that district are pushing rent increases of 8-12% on renewals, according to Cushman & Wakefield's Milan luxury-retail report. A prolonged creative vacuum reduces Moschino's negotiating position.
Watch for Aeffe's Q4 2024 earnings call in March, where management will face analyst questions on Moschino's creative-search timeline and whether the brand will show a collection during Milan Fashion Week in September 2025. If no appointment is announced by June, expect Aeffe to either install an interim design team—likely promoting from Moschino's existing atelier—or accelerate conversations with external candidates who have existing non-compete agreements expiring in mid-2025. Trade sources indicate Aeffe has informally reached out to at least two mid-career designers currently at Kering-owned houses, though neither has publicly surfaced. Separately, monitor whether Moschino's Asia-Pacific wholesale partners—particularly Lane Crawford and Joyce—reduce buy quantities for Fall/Winter 2025. Both retailers have quietly decreased Italian-brand exposure by 10-15% over the past two seasons in favor of French and British labels with more stable creative leadership.
Aeffe closed Thursday at €1.21 per share, down 3.2% on the day. The stock has traded in a €1.15-€1.45 range over the past twelve months, reflecting broader pressure on mid-tier Italian luxury equities without controlling-family buyout catalysts.