The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
MILAN, Italy — Italian fashion house Roberto Cavalli has signed a partnership agreement with DAMAC Properties under which it will provide the interior design for at least five luxury hotels, starting with a first one to be built in Dubai by 2023.
The agreement, which follows a separate collaboration with DAMAC on Cavalli-branded villas, is part of the company's bid to expand the luxury and fashion brand into lifestyle categories and find new sources of revenue for the Florentine label famous for its animal prints. Company officials declined to give financial details of the deal.
Roberto Cavalli is on track to break even this year and return to a net profit in 2019, chief executive Gian Giacomo Ferraris said at an event to announce the hotel project on Monday .
He declined to comment on market speculation that Italian private equity group Clessidra, which bought 90 percent of Roberto Cavalli in 2015, might be looking to sell, other than saying that management was focused on executing a strategy agreed with the shareholder.
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"The company is making big improvements, but to remain competitive, it needs to invest," Ferraris said, adding Clessidra was fully supporting the company's growth.
"The important thing is to ensure that the growth happens in an organic manner and quickly."
Clessidra's Managing Director Manuel Catalano said earlier this month the private equity group was working well with Ferraris, who is also former head of fashion house Versace, and had no intention of exiting Roberto Cavalli in the near term.
By Agnieszka Flak and Claudia Cristoferi; Editor: Emelia Sithole-Matarise.
The luxury goods maker is seeking pricing harmonisation across the globe, and adjusts prices in different markets to ensure that the company is”fair to all [its] clients everywhere,” CEO Leena Nair said.
Hermes saw Chinese buyers snap up its luxury products as the Kelly bag maker showed its resilience amid a broader slowdown in demand for the sector.
The group’s flagship Prada brand grew more slowly but remained resilient in the face of a sector-wide slowdown, with retail sales up 7 percent.
The guidance was issued as the French group released first-quarter sales that confirmed forecasts for a slowdown. Weak demand in China and poor performance at flagship Gucci are weighing on the group.