The man at the helm of luxury’s largest conglomerate, Bernard Arnault and his luxury group LVMH have an indelible imprint on the fashion industry — on account of the sheer scale of the company's acquisitions and continuing profitability.
In addition to LVMH, Arnault oversees further investment and holding vehicles. Groupe Arnault has invested in Netflix and Blue Capital and also took a major stake in French food chain Carrefour. He has also invested in Boo.com and a variety of other online ventures, as well as buying Princess Yachts outright.
Arnault began his career working for his father’s manufacturing company. Five years into the position, he convinced his father to liquidate the construction division and enter the real estate market. Under the name Férinel, the new company initially developed specialty holiday accommodations. Named a director of the company in 1974, he became chief executive in 1977. In 1979, he succeeded his father as president of the company.
In 1984, with the help of Antoine Bernheim, a senior partner of financier Lazard Frères et Cie, Arnault acquired Financière Agache, becoming chief executive and taking control of Boussac, a beleaguered textile company which owned, among other assets, Christian Dior and the department store Le Bon Marché. Arnault used this foothold in the luxury business to begin building what would become the world’s largest luxury conglomerate.
Over the next 11 years, LVMH’s value multiplied fifteen times over and sales and profit increased fivefold. One of the key factors in the company’s success has been Arnault’s programme of decentralisation and his efforts to highlight each brand’s heritage, so that each company is viewed independently in its own right.
In 1993, LVMH acquired Berluti and Kenzo. In the same year Arnault bought out the French economic newspaper La Tribune, which he later sold, reinvesting in the newspaper business by buying Les Echos.
Over the succeeding years, along with scores of acquisitions in the drinks market, Arnault earned his sobriquet “a wolf in cashmere,” by acquiring Givenchy, Guerlain, Marc Jacobs , Sephora, Emilio Pucci, Fendi, Loro Piana, Nicholas Kirkwood , Thomas Pink, R.M Williams, EDUN, Moynat and Donna Karen, along with a host of jewellery brands, including TAG Heuer, De Beers and Bulgari. Arnault’s business activities have been interpreted by many as indicating the executive is firmly set on acquiring Hermès. However, the Hermès family has thus far publically rebuffed Arnault’s advances, winning legal action against LVMH, and taking steps to prevent further investment in Hermès by Arnault.
In October 2020, Arnault closed the acquisition of Tiffany to join LVMH. The acquisition adds to Arnault’s luxury group.
Arnault has been married twice and has five grown children, four of whom — Dephine, Antoine, Alexandre and Frédéric — work within the business. According to Forbes, he is the richest man in Europe and fourth-richest in the world.
VITAL STATISTICS
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The former Tiffany executive and son of Bernard Arnault has been handed a daunting task: reviving LVMH’s famed Moet Hennessy drinks business in the midst of a tariff war.
Jonathan Anderson’s Dior Debut Is Slated for June
The former Loewe designer was confirmed as artistic director for men’s collections in a brief statement by LVMH chairman Bernard Arnault that left plenty of questions unanswered.
LVMH Sales to Test Luxury Investors’ Nerves After Tariff Pain
A luxury stocks index compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has shed more than $200 billion from its February peak. LVMH reports 1Q sales Tuesday as hopes are evaporating that US resilience or Chinese stimulus can spark a lasting rebound.
LVMH Sales to Test Luxury Investors’ Nerves After Tariff Pain
A luxury stocks index compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has shed more than $200 billion from its February peak. LVMH reports 1Q sales Tuesday as hopes are evaporating that US resilience or Chinese stimulus can spark a lasting rebound.
The Problem with Louis Vuitton’s Texas Factory
Six years after Bernard Arnault and Donald Trump cut the ribbon on a Vuitton plant in rural Texas, a Reuters investigation has uncovered significant underperformance at the handbag plant, underscoring the hurdles LVMH faces as it attempts to build its production footprint in the US.
The Problem with Louis Vuitton’s Texas Factory
Six years after Bernard Arnault and Donald Trump cut the ribbon on a Vuitton plant in rural Texas, a Reuters investigation has uncovered significant underperformance at the handbag plant, underscoring the hurdles LVMH faces as it attempts to build its production footprint in the US.
Global Market Rout Darkens Outlook for European Luxury Labels
One Wall Street analyst now expects global sales of luxury goods to fall by as much as 2 percent this year, marking the industry’s longest downturn in over two decades.
Phantom Bonuses, Staff Exodus: Inside the Troubled House of Tiffany
Tiffany & Co.‘s initiative to boost staff morale with the “Tiffany Joy” app backfired, evolving into a source of frustration as employees faced increasing pressure to engage, highlighting broader challenges in the company’s culture and sales strategy.
Phantom Bonuses, Staff Exodus: Inside the Troubled House of Tiffany
Tiffany & Co.‘s initiative to boost staff morale with the “Tiffany Joy” app backfired, evolving into a source of frustration as employees faced increasing pressure to engage, highlighting broader challenges in the company’s culture and sales strategy.
Op-Ed | Why Luxury Needs Trump
Bernard Arnault’s appearance at the US President’s inauguration raised some eyebrows, but it was good business sense for the LVMH chairman, argues Andrea Felsted.
Bernard Arnault, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg and More Attend Trump’s Inauguration
A number of top business leaders in fashion and tech attended the smaller-scale inauguration inside the US Capitol.
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