French luxury conglomerate LVMH saw its stock slide by more than 6% following the Tuesday evening reveal of its 2024 annual results.
LVMH’s Q4 earnings show mixed results but resilience in key segments. Learn why LVMHF stock is a buy, with strong long-term growth despite margin pressures.
Following Meta’s layoffs earlier this month, Arnault, the head of the luxury goods conglomerate that controls brands like Louis Vuitton, Fendi, and Sephora, likened Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s move to let go of low-performing workers to layoffs at Tiffany’s.
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Luxury giant LVMH is "seriously considering" bulking up its production capacities in the United States, CEO Bernard Arnault said on Tuesday, praising a "wind of optimism" in the country that contrasted with the "cold shower" of potentially higher corporate taxes in France.
PARIS (Reuters) - LVMH has made a good start to 2025, CEO Bernard Arnault said on Tuesday, after the luxury conglomerate posted a slight rise in fourth-quarter sales, though analysts cautioned it may still fall short of heightened market expectations after recent share gains.
"LVMH sees FY24 net profit slide amid economic headwinds " was originally created and published by Retail Insight Network, a GlobalData owned brand.
Over two days of schmoozing with executives employed by one of the most powerful groups in the industry, here are the comments that stood out.
The core fashion and leather goods business—which houses Louis Vuitton and Dior—recorded revenue of €11.14 billion for the quarter, surpassing analysts’ forecasts of €10.915 billion.
Shares in LVMH were on track for their largest drop in 14 months on Wednesday after the luxury goods group's latest sales figures disappointed investors hoping for stronger signs of a rebound at the sector bellwether.
Bernard Arnault said he spoke with Mark Zuckerberg about Meta layoffs, which the LVMH boss described as workers being "promoted outwards."