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Where should we do our Xmas shopping?

X-mas shoppingKering and LVMH are the two most powerful fashion conglomerates. Together they best represent the French myth of elegance, luxury, and sophistication. 

Let’s look how they compete with each other and what makes them interesting?

 

Kerring LVMH
Head office Paris Paris
# of Brands owned 18 > 60
Key portfolio assets Gucci
Y. Saint-Laurent
Balenciaga
A. McQueen
Sergio Rossi
Stella McCartney
Puma
Volcom
Louis Vuitton
Givenchy
M.Jacobs
Fendi
Kenzo
Donna Karan
Moet & Chandon
Hennessy
Tag Heuer
Sephora
DFS
Revenues Total: € 9.7 billion
US:  19 %
Europe: 31 %
Asia, incl.  Japan: 37 %
Others: 13 %
Total: € 28.1 billion
US: 23 %
Europe: 31 %
Asia, incl. Japan: 36 %
Others: 10 %
# of stores 958 3204
# of employees ~38’300 ~100’000
CEO François-Henri Pinault
(Chairman und CEO),
married to Salma Hayek

Bernard Arnault, ranks #10
on Forbe’s list of the World’s
Billionaires. Additionally, he
heads up Christian Dior S.A.

Key brand Gucci Louis Vuitton
Weak brand Puma Edun
The designers we’re
talking and thinking about!
Hedi Slimane
Cathy Horyn
Riccardo Tiscie
The new born stars Alexander Wang (29)
working at  Baleciaga
Phoebe Philo (36)
working at Céline
The iconic items The brand-changing Bottega
Veneta Cabat bag for about USD 6,000
The Gucci loafer
LVMH brown and gold  Speedy bag,
Marc by Marc Jacobs mouse flats
Major market exposure Asia Asia
Specific effort Sustainable python sourcing Lends private collection Stradivarius
violins to young musicians
Recent additions Christopher Kane
(clothing – Scotland)
Pomellato (jewelry – Italy)
Bulgari
Present legal actions Threatened eBay with a lawsuit
to prevent it continuing to sell fake items
Sued eBay for the sale of fake items
> LVMH won USD 63 million,

Sued Wal-Mart
> reached a settlement for an undisclosed amount

Major strengths With its new strategy, Kering will be
able to deliver higher efficiencies
and better shareholder returns
Affluent customers spend on luxury
items, whatever the economic conditions,
hence the business is highly resilient
LVMH can mitigate the downside of individual brands
Both up and downstream, LVMH has high long-term leverage
Major weaknesses The sports and lifestyle businesses
have proven very difficult to integrate
into one of the world’s most famous luxury conglomerates
Growth is driven by Asian consumers,
even in Europe
The company’s wine and spirit business
is capital intensive and hence ROI is
below what it could be
Operating margins +/- 20 % > 20 %
EV/EBITA 13 x 9 x
FCF yield 5.7 % 5 %
FWD P/E 20.4 x 17 x
Organic growth rate 6 % 20 %
Recommendation For our clients only For our clients only