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Luxury brands face uncertainty after Donald Trump won the US presidential election. His victory spells trouble for the sector's hopes of a comeback in China. AdvertisementAmerica has elected a new president, paving an uncertain future for luxury brands looking to boost sales in China. Tariffs further complicate luxury's China issuesChina has been a reliable cash cow for luxury brands for decades. AdvertisementNationalism's rise doesn't play well for luxuryTrump's return to the White House is a signal of a wider issue facing luxury brands — rising nationalism.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Jelena Sokolova, Martin Roll, they'll, Cheng Xin, Gary Ng, Ng, Daniel Langer, Justin Sullivan, It's Organizations: Service, America, Beijing, Morningstar, Trump, McKinsey, Pepperdine University Locations: China, outflows, Russia, Europe
Richemont results miss expectations, hit by weaker China demand
  + stars: | 2024-11-08 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRichemont results miss expectations, hit by weaker China demandCartier-owner Richemont saw its earnings results hit by China and a fall in demand for luxury watches.
Persons: Cartier, Richemont Locations: China
China's luxury slump is spreading to more consumer brands. Companies like Starbucks, Estée Lauder, and Nike have reported falling sales in the region. It's hitting Western brands particularly hard, as reflected by companies across the consumer sector reporting muted sales in China in the most recent quarter. Consumer spending in China never fully recovered after the government started lifting COVID-19 curbs in late 2022. AdvertisementAdidas managed to buck the trend, reporting sales up 9% in Greater China in the third quarter.
Persons: Estée Lauder, , China's, MingYii Lai, Brian Niccol, L'Oréal, Lynn Song Organizations: Companies, Starbucks, Nike, Service, Burberry, Daxue Consulting, InBev, Carlsberg, Apple, Adidas, Heineken, Greater China, ING Locations: China, Beijing, Greater China, Greater
How Hermès is bucking the global luxury slowdown
  + stars: | 2024-10-31 | by ( Natalie Rice | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
French luxury company Hermès has spent nearly 200 years emphasizing quality, scarcity and desirability — a strategy that's helped it dominate the luxury sector, even over its much larger rivals. Analysts say the Birkin and the Kelly account for between 25% and 28% of Hermès' total revenue. For fiscal year 2023 Hermès reported the fourth-highest revenue total of the major luxury fashion brands, behind LVMH , Richemont and Kering . In its most recent quarter, Hermès posted double-digit revenue growth while competitors LVMH and Kering reported sharper-than-expected declines in sales. Globally, many luxury consumers have pulled back on spending, particularly aspirational buyers in 2023 and 2024.
Persons: Hermès, Birkin, Kelly handbags —, Jane Birkin, Princess Grace Kelly of Monaco, Kelly, Luca Solca Organizations: Bernstein Locations: LVMH
The country's economy is slowing down, and some shoppers are rethinking their luxury purchases. AdvertisementChina, with its sheer population size and once-meteoric economic growth, has been heralded as a reliable cash cow of luxury brands for decades. But the golden days of luxury shopping in China seem to be fading for many luxury brands — though there are exceptions. In 2021, the Asia region, excluding Japan, was responsible for 35% of LVMH's total revenue. It's a similar story at other luxury brands.
Persons: , LVMH, Kering, Hugo Boss, Burberry Organizations: Service, Gucci, Swatch Locations: China, Asia, Japan, Pacific
download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . LVMH, the largest of the luxury conglomerates, announced its third-quarter earnings this week, and the results were grim. AdvertisementWhile personal luxury sales in China grew by more than 37% each year from 2019 through 2021, that annual growth is not expected to hit more than 4.2% through 2028, according to EMARKETER data. AdvertisementEMARKETER's Canaves pointed to the collaborations and moves toward streetwear that helped some brands emerge from the last luxury slump. Of course, any expansion into new categories should not take attention from handbags and clothing, the revenue drivers of luxury brands.
Persons: LVMH, , Louis Vuitton, Salvatore Ferragamo, Goldman Sachs, Gucci, Hermès, Jean, Jacques Guiony, Adam Cochrane, Chanel, Canaves, Guiony, Birkin, Deutsche Bank's Cochrane, Cartier, Brunello Cucinelli, Rambourg, Louis Organizations: Service, Revenue, Louis, Burberry, Business, Deutsche Bank, Gucci, Deutsche Bank's, Chez Locations: China, Asia, Japan, COVID, streetwear, Paris
Luxury stocks may be a risky China stimulus bet
  + stars: | 2024-10-19 | by ( Hakyung Kim | In Hakyungkim | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +7 min
A post-pandemic spending surge led to luxury stocks such as LVMH to reach all-time highs in early 2023, but that soon changed. We believe improved confidence and sentiment is required to reach even our flat year-over-year Chinese luxury growth forecast for 2025," Wallace noted. Luxury stocks are feeling the pressure — year to date, U.S.-traded shares of major players LVMH and Kering are down about 17% and 41%, respectively. Analysts and investors are mixed as to whether the Chinese stimulus measures can revive luxury spending growth among consumers — and whether it will create a meaningful tailwind for luxury companies. Whether the luxury sector can continue growing at the same levels without as much Chinese consumer spending remains in question.
Persons: — stoking, Ben Harburg, Morgan Stanley, Ashley Wallace, Wallace, Jean, Jacques Guiony, Moncler, Hermes, Prada, Richemont, LVMUY CFRUY, , Edouard Aubin, Sauron, Harburg, LVMH's Guiony, we've Organizations: Alpha, Bank of America, of America, Consumers Locations: China, Covid, 3Q24, U.S, LVMH
The ultra-rich owners of the world's leading luxury brands took a hit to their fortunes on Tuesday. LVMH shares fell as much as 7% in Paris on Tuesday, slashing the value of his stake by about $13 billion, before paring their decline to 3%. Arnault ranked as the world's fourth-richest person with a $197 billion net worth at Monday's market close, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Pinault was 83rd in the wealth rankings with a $24 billion fortune at Monday's close, down more than $11 billion this year. For example, the Dumas family owes most of its estimated $150 billion fortune to Hermès stock, which slid 3% on Tuesday.
Persons: Bernard Arnault, , LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, Dior, Arnault, François Pinault, Gucci, Kering, Pinault, Dumas, Johann Rupert's, Cartier, Piaget, Remo Ruffini isn't, Forbes, Chanel isn't, Alain, Gérard Wertheimer, they're Organizations: Service, Bloomberg Locations: LVMH, Paris, China, Monday's
European luxury stocks have struggled this year amid weak Chinese demand. AdvertisementEuropean luxury stocks rallied sharply this week as a wave of Chinese stimulus measures spurred hopes of more spending. On Monday, the day before the stimulus measures were announced, Bank of America analysts cut their price objectives on luxury stocks by an average of around 20%. They also downgraded four luxury stocks to neutral, and another from neutral to underperform — leaving just three luxury stocks at buy ratings. Now, it seems investors are banking on the stimulus measures to bring luxury spending back to the country.
Persons: Cartier, , Burberry, Hugo Boss Organizations: Hermes, Service, Bank of America Locations: China, EU, Japan
London CNN —The value of some of the world’s best-known luxury companies is plunging as Chinese consumers pull back on spending, with even the most exclusive brands feeling the pain. The rout seems to be accelerating, with those sales tumbling 14% in the second quarter, according to results published late Tuesday. “For now, the (luxury) market remains volatile as investors reassess the once-held belief that luxury brands are a safe-haven investment, shielded from broader economic downturns,” Jochen Stanzl, chief market analyst at CMC Markets, told CNN. “The Chinese market contracted slightly; the market situation in the premium and luxury segment in China remained weak,” the company said. China’s economy grew 4.7% year-on-year in the second quarter of the year, according to official data released last week, missing economists’ expectations and marking the weakest growth since the first quarter of 2023.
Persons: Bernard Arnault’s, Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, ” Jochen Stanzl, Richemont, Cartier, , Gucci, Kering, Hermes, Birkin, Olesya Dmitracova Organizations: London CNN, Prada, CMC Markets, CNN, Europe’s, Reuters, Porsche, Benz, Bain & Company Locations: Asia, Japan, China, Paris, Hong Kong, China , Hong Kong, Macao, North America, Europe, United States
Read previewAs Chinese buyers eschewed local stores and poured into Japan this year in search of luxury bargains, one high-end powerhouse was an outlier. AdvertisementThe company's success in China comes as many of Hermès' industry peers saw China and Asia revenue sales tank from softening consumer demand. But most of Hermès' sales this year in China and Japan were largely from local customers, said Dumas. "Not very many foreigners buy Hermès in Japan, and the Chinese tend to buy in China." The luxury company reported overall sales revenue for the first half of the year of 7.5 billion euros, an increase of 12% compared to the same period in 2023.
Persons: , Hèrmes, Hérmes, Axel Dumas, Burberry, Hermès, Dumas, Hermes Organizations: Service, Business, Hermès, Bloomberg Locations: Japan, Asia, China, Paris, Pacific, Europe, France
Consumer spending in China has been improving "more moderately than before COVID-19," Luca Solca, a luxury goods analyst at Bernstein, told Business Insider. In its most recent quarter, Burberry's Chinese sales revenue declined 21% from last year. Massive discounts and online shoppingTo try to boost sales, luxury brands have given massive discounts to Chinese consumers. Luxury goods are still popular with wealthy Chinese shoppers — just not in China. Not all luxury brands are feeling the heat in China.
Persons: , LVMH, Jean, Jacques Guiony, Luca Solca, Bernstein, Solca, Hugo Boss, Richemont, Cartier, Versace, Marc Jacobs, Damien Yeo, Yeo, TD Cowen, Guiony, Hermès Organizations: Service, Gucci, Business, Consumer, Swatch, Asia, Brands, Balenciaga, Bloomberg, Burberry, Fitch Solutions Locations: Asia, China, China , Hong Kong, Macau, Asia Pacific, Japan
Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street. One could say Wall Street is in wait-and-see mode ahead of earnings from the megacap tech stocks that start after the bell with Club holding Alphabet . As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Dover, Baird, China –, Estee Lauder, Ike Perlmutter, Nelson Peltz, We're, Perlmutter, he's, Peltz, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, Marshall Excelsior Company, Clean Energy, Marshall Excelsior, Nike, Burberry, Richemont, Swatch, Disney, Street, Enphase, Texas Instruments, Chubb, Seagate, Vertiv, GE Vernova, Boston Scientific, Jim Cramer's Charitable Locations: Michigan, Dover, China, Europe, U.S, Japan, Asia, Enphase Energy
Luxury brands are slashing prices in China
  + stars: | 2024-07-18 | by ( Alexandra Bacon | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +1 min
Consumer spending in China is down, and luxury brands are feeling the hit. Brands like Balenciaga, Burberry, and Marc Jacobs have offered big discounts to reel customers back in. But experts warn that discounting could diminish these luxury brands' desirability. AdvertisementLuxury brands like Marc Jacobs, Burberry, and Balenciaga have been offering big discounts in China to try to reel in customers following a drop in sales figures. This week, Hugo Boss, Burberry, Richemont, and Swatch Group all reported slumping sales in China.
Persons: Marc Jacobs, , Hugo Boss, Burberry Organizations: Brands, Burberry, Service, Swatch Group, Business Locations: China, British
Read previewHugo Boss, Burberry, Richemont, and Swatch have all called out slumping sales in China this week as consumers cut back on luxury spending. Swiss watch group Swatch said it expects the Chinese market "to remain challenging for the entire luxury goods industry until the end of the year." But much of this spending has been overseas, and sales in China have fallen for some of the world's biggest luxury brands. AdvertisementBefore the pandemic, about two-thirds of Chinese luxury spending occurred outside mainland China, plummeting to less than 10% in 2021 and 2022 because of travel restrictions, according to data from Bain. The consultancy said that this started to rebound in 2023 with the return of overseas tourism, with an estimated 30% of luxury spending taking place outside mainland China.
Persons: , Hugo Boss, Burberry, Gerry Murphy, they've, Bain, Luca Solca, Vacheron Constantin, Marc Jacobs, Versace, Richemont Organizations: Service, Swatch, Business, Bain & Company, Richemont, Cartier, Burberry, Financial Times, Bain, Prada, The Financial Times, Luxury Summit Locations: China, Swiss, Americas, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, South Korean, East
But there's another corporation beating LVMH at its own game, and you probably haven't even heard of it: Richemont. Switzerland-based Richemont, behind brands like Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, and Piaget, is having a moment. "All of this favors the most established brands: Cartier and Van Cleef." Driven by Richemont's top brands, Cartier and Van Cleef, sales gained 7% in the country, including Hong Kong and Macau, in Richemont's 2024 fiscal year. "If you're in a bar or restaurant, you're sitting at a distance, you can recognize the Labra pendant from Van Cleef.
Persons: , Louis Vuitton, Bernard Arnault's, Van Cleef, Piaget, outperforming LVMH, Saint Laurent, It's, Cartier, Chiara Battistini, it's, Gucci, Arnault, Johann Rupert, Rupert, Richemont, Fflur Roberts, HSBC's Rambourg, Diana —, Tim Graham, Jelena Sokolova, Morningstar, Rambourg, Euromonitor's Roberts, Van, Keith Tsuji, Sokolova, Cleef, Nicolas Bos, — Bos, Nicholas Bos, Jared Siskin, I've, What's, JPMorgan's Battistini, Bos, Porter Organizations: Service, LVMH, Business, Cartier, Gucci, HSBC, Google, JPMorgan, Credit Suisse, Deloitte, Local, Art Basel, McKinsey, Prada Locations: Switzerland, China, Euromonitor, Hong Kong, Macau, Art Basel Hong Kong, Asia
The Chinese-founded fast-fashion giant is reported to have turned its attention to the LSE after facing regulatory and political challenges over a potential initial public offering in New York. U.S. lawmakers have raised several concerns about Shein, including over the transparency of its supply chain. The LSE has struggled to court high-growth companies in recent years compared with markets in Asia and the U.S., and has recently lost significant players including travel group TUI and cybersecurity firm Darktrace. However, British computing startup Raspberry Pi last week said it plans to list in London. CNBC has contacted Shein for comment.
Persons: Lord Dominic Johnson, Johnson, Shein, — Jenni Reid Organizations: London Stock Exchange, Department for Business Trade, CNBC, LSE, New York . Locations: New York, New York . U.S, Asia, U.S, London
European markets are poised to open lower Friday after shares snapped a nine-day winning streak in the previous session as earnings weighed on positive sentiment. The pan-European Stoxx 600 closed lower Thursday as earnings misses from Siemens and EasyJet weighed on the index. Earnings come Friday from Richemont and Engie , while inflation updates are due out of the U.K. and euro zone.
Persons: EasyJet Organizations: Siemens Locations: Richemont
Shoppers line up to enter a Cartier store, a unit of Cie. Financiere Richemont SA, on Canton Road in the Tsim Sha Tsui area of Hong Kong. Shares of Swiss luxury group Richemont climbed as much as 6.3% Friday after the company reported record full-year sales, even as Asia-Pacific spending waned. The Cartier owner said group sales rose 3% at actual exchange rates to an all-time high of 20.6 billion euros ($22.38 billion) in the financial year ending in March, despite a weakening outlook for luxury brands. Fiscal fourth-quarter sales fell 1% to 4.8 billion euros at actual rates, driven by a slowdown in Asia-Pacific. In a separate statement, the company announced Nicolas Bos, CEO of Van Cleef & Arpels, as its new group CEO, effective June 1.
Persons: Financiere, Cartier, Johann Rupert, Nicolas Bos, Van Cleef Organizations: Cartier, Cie, Financiere Richemont SA Locations: Canton, Tsui, Hong Kong, Asia, Pacific, London, Asia Pacific
Consumers, particularly those in China, have been tightening their purse strings and cutting their spending on luxury goods in light of macroeconomic uncertainties. But Barclays notes that several companies in the sector make good plays right now. LVMH Barclays is bullish on French label LVMH and raised its target price by nearly 13.6% to 937 euros ($1,009.18). "We remain confident that Moncler will deliver above-market growth for the rest of 2024," the analysts wrote. Barclays' target price on the stock is 168 Swiss francs ($182.62), which gives it around 28.2% potential upside.
Persons: Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Dior, Tiffany, Moncler Organizations: Barclays, Tiffany, Vogue, Richemont Locations: China, Europe, Sephora, Switzerland
The pre-owned luxury watch market is thriving
  + stars: | 2024-04-24 | by ( Fawnia Soo Hoo | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +11 min
Granted, the pandemic-induced second hand luxury watch boom peaked back in March 2022, but the market is still going strong, and price levels remain higher than pre-Covid times. “(They’re) a crucial demographic for the growth and evolution of the pre-owned and vintage luxury watch industry,” added Paul Altieri, founder & CEO of multi-brand online luxury marketplace Bob’s Watches. Don't be shy," said Dimepiece's Brynn Wallner of new buyers' potential nerves when it comes to luxury watch stores. How can you tell if a luxury pre-owned watch is the real deal? “Luxury watches of this caliber will go from one generation to the next to the next to the next,” he explained.
When trying to assess the growth prospects of companies, portfolio manager Jack Dwyer says the consumer is king. CNBC's Will Koulouris will ask the CEO of Infusive Asset Management how he harnesses the power of the consumer in Pro Talks on Wednesday, April 24. The top holdings of Infusive's Consumer Alpha Global Leaders Fund include Amazon , Netflix and Alphabet , in addition to consumer stocks such as McDonald's , LVMH and PepsiCo . When selecting stocks, Dwyer urges investors to avoid making generalizations about consumer strength on a country basis, and highlighted a divergence across the luxury sector. To discover Dwyer's top stock picks, j oin CNBC Pro Talks on Wednesday, April 24 at 6:30 a.m. BST / 1:30 p.m. SGT / 1:30 a.m.
Persons: Jack Dwyer, CNBC's Will Koulouris, Dwyer, Hermes, Morningstar, Will Koulouris Organizations: Infusive, Management, Infusive's Consumer Alpha Global, Fund, Amazon, Netflix, PepsiCo, Nvidia Locations: LVMH, millennials
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewCompared to some of its Tiger Cub peers, $48 billion Viking Global's highs and lows have been more muted. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. "If the stock went up 25% tomorrow, we would probably sell it absent any other fundamental change in the business." AdvertisementThe firm's flagship long-short fund was up 5.8% in the first quarter, a person close to the firm told Business Insider, and its long-only fund returned 10.1%.
Persons: , Justin Walsh, Walsh, Hermes Organizations: Service, Tiger Cub, Tiger, Business, Harvard Business School Investment, Citadel, Business Insider, Cartier Locations: Stamford, Swiss
Jim Cramer reviews Citi's European 'Super Seven'
  + stars: | 2024-03-08 | by ( Julie Coleman | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday reviewed the "Super Seven," mega cap European stocks Citi recently named as alternatives to the Magnificent Seven, but with lower valuations. "I want you to think of the Super Seven as a shopping list of high-quality European stocks that could be very attractive on a pullback," he said. Novo Nordisk " came out with the original GLP-1, diabetes and weight loss drug Ozempic. Richemont SAP Schneider Electric Eaton Ferrari"As great as the Super Seven may be, you're not exactly early to any of these stories — most of these stocks are trading at or near their all-time highs," Cramer said. "Of course, you could say the same thing about the Magnificent Seven, but it makes me a little queasy to recommend something that's already had a huge run."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Beata Manthey, Bullish, Dior, SAP Schneider Electric Eaton, Cramer, that's Organizations: Citi, Nordisk, Givenchy, SAP Schneider Electric
Citi has identified European stocks it says are similar to the high-flying " Magnificent Seven " U.S. technology stocks, but trade at cheaper valuations leaving more room for them to rise. Citi's resulting Super Seven picks are Novo Nordisk , ASML , LVMH , SAP , Schneider Electric , Richemont and Ferrari . All of the stocks stocks also trade in the United States. Despite the rally over the past year, Citi points out that as a group, the Super Seven have lagged the Magnificent Seven, with 70% less appreciation since early 2023, leaving more upside potential. Looking ahead, Citi said the Super Seven was well positioned to continue outperforming should current "narrow" market conditions persist, and cautioned against selling stocks on the basis of a narrow market leadership.
Persons: Beata M, — CNBC's Charlotte Reed Organizations: Citi, Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Novo Nordisk, ASML, SAP, Schneider, Ferrari Locations: Europe, LVMH, United States
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