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Why Louis Vuitton is struggling but Hermès is not

The Straits Times

|

December 19, 2024

Worries that the luxury business is peaking are overblown.

Why Louis Vuitton is struggling but Hermès is not

There will be fewer designer handbags or high heels under the Christmas tree in 2024. Spending on personal luxury goods is set to fall by 2 per cent in 2024, according to Bain, a consultancy. Sales of fashion and leather items at LVMH, the world's biggest luxury conglomerate, have tumbled. Kering, which owns Gucci, has issued a string of profit warnings. Anyone that receives Versace goodies from Santa may feel a little less pleased than usual. The luxury brand is selling 40 per cent of its products at a discount.

These travails follow an extraordinary rise for the luxury industry. For two decades it expanded smartly as brands reached new customers. In 2023 global sales of personal luxury goods hit US$400 billion (S$540 billion), up from a little over US$100 billion in 2000, according to Bain. The combined market capitalisation of the 10 most valuable Western luxury firms approached US$1 trillion, compared with around US$300 billion in 2013. Over the past 12 months, however, their value has fallen by more than a tenth and growth has reversed. Can luxury recapture its lost allure?

Two trends fuelled the growth of the luxury business. The first was globalisation. Brands that began life catering to Western elites in places such as London, New York and Paris increasingly turned eastwards for growth – and to China in particular, for good reason. In 2000 there were 39,000 dollar millionaires in the country, according to UBS, a bank; by 2023 there were six million, more than anywhere else other than America, and twice as many as in Britain, the third-biggest home for millionaires. The Chinese market made up around 15 per cent of global personal luxury goods sales in 2023, about five times its share in 2000.

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