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.
PARIS, France — The billionaire brothers who own Chanel have become almost $3 billion wealthier this year after the iconic luxury company reported a 38 percent rise in annual profit.
Alain and Gerard Wertheimer each have $11.8 billion fortunes and are the sixth and seventh-richest people in France, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Almost all of their fortunes stem from their stake in Chanel, which reported 2014 revenue of $7.5 billion and net income of $1.4 billion. Chanel International BV files the closely held company's global financial results with Kamer van Koophandel, the Dutch chamber of commerce.
Net profit for the five publicly traded companies the index uses to value Chanel — Prada, Kering, LVMH, L'Oreal and Estee Lauder — was down a collective 6 percent in their 2014 fiscal years.
"Chanel is having extraordinary success in China and with the Chinese, hence their recent phenomenal growth," said Luca Solca, head of luxury goods research at Exane BNP Paribas in London.
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The Wertheimers' fortunes have risen 13 percent since January 2014, ranking then among the world's 100 richest people. Eight other luxury goods billionaires from the Bloomberg index — Liliane Bettencourt, Bernard Arnault, Francois Pinault, Leonard Lauder, Giorgio Armani, Cheng Yu-Tung, Ralph Lauren and Johann Rupert — have fallen a combined 11 percent over the same period, as luxury demand in China slowed following a clampdown on graft. Miuccia Prada, chairman of Prada SpA fell off the Bloomberg index after her fortune declined 26 percent this year to $3.6 billion, making her the world's 437th-richest person.
By Devon Pendleton; editors: Robert Lafranco, Andrew Heathcote, Dashiell Bennett.
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.