LVMH Shares Fall as Second-Quarter Sales Fail to Impress 

The LVMH logo is photographed at the Vivatech show in Paris, June 15, 2023. (AP)
The LVMH logo is photographed at the Vivatech show in Paris, June 15, 2023. (AP)
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LVMH Shares Fall as Second-Quarter Sales Fail to Impress 

The LVMH logo is photographed at the Vivatech show in Paris, June 15, 2023. (AP)
The LVMH logo is photographed at the Vivatech show in Paris, June 15, 2023. (AP)

Shares in LVMH fell sharply on Wednesday as analysts said that an in-line increase in sales at the world's top luxury indicated the overall sector was moving towards a less impressive path of growth.

"While this is a solid growth rate in absolute terms...whether we are now at the end of the positive earnings revision cycle for luxury and on the drivers of sector growth going forward" wrote analysts at JP Morgan.

LVMH shares were down 3.7% in early session trading, also dragging down the shares of its rival Kering.

The French company, whose 75 brands include fashion labels Louis Vuitton and Dior as well as Hennessy cognac and US jeweller Tiffany, said on Tuesday it made 21.2 billion euros ($23.4 billion) of sales in the three months to the end of June.

The 17% increase at constant exchange rates was a touch better than analyst expectations for 16% growth. LVMH's leather goods division, home to Vuitton and Dior, grew revenues by 21%, also just above the expected 20% increase.

The narrow beat for a company that had routinely delivered results ahead of expectations, and is regarded as a bellwether for the luxury industry, flagged the "normalization" of the sector after years of stellar growth driven by post-pandemic euphoria, Luca Solca at Bernstein said.

LVMH also reported a 1% fall in US sales as appetite for high-end fashion and leather goods slowed there, particularly among less wealthy shoppers, and lower-than-expected margins due to high marketing spending.



Dr Martens Slips into the Red; Says Festive Season Off to a Good Start

FILE PHOTO: People enter in a Dr. Martens store in Manchester, Britain, May 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People enter in a Dr. Martens store in Manchester, Britain, May 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff/File Photo
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Dr Martens Slips into the Red; Says Festive Season Off to a Good Start

FILE PHOTO: People enter in a Dr. Martens store in Manchester, Britain, May 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People enter in a Dr. Martens store in Manchester, Britain, May 26, 2023. REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff/File Photo

Dr Martens said on Thursday that the autumn-winter festive season had got off to an encouraging start after the struggling bootmaker swung to a first-half pretax loss on weak demand in the United States, its biggest market.
Its shares, which have lost about a quarter of their value so far this year, rose 16% in early trade, Reuters reported.
The British company, whose chunky lace-up boots popularly known as "Docs" or "DMs" were originally made for workers before becoming a fashion statement in the 1960s, has been contending with a weak North American market and is betting on the festive season to shore up its sales and profit.
Dr Martens expects to make cost savings of about 25 million pounds ($31.64 million) in its fiscal year to end-March, 2026 with around two-thirds of that coming from job cuts.
The company reported a pretax loss of 28.7 million pounds for the six months ended Sept. 29, compared with a profit of 25.8 million pounds a year earlier. Revenue dropped 18% to 325 million pounds.
To halt the decline in profit at a time when consumers are shying away from pricy items such as the brand's $170 classic boots, Dr Martens has sought to cut costs while also increasing spending on US marketing.
"Our new marketing campaigns are showing encouraging early signs, with strong sales of new product, giving us confidence that we will return USA (direct-to-consumer) to positive growth in the second half," outgoing CEO Kenny Wilson said in a statement.
Wilson, who announced in April that he would step down, will be replaced by Chief Brand Officer Ije Nwokorie on Jan. 6, the company confirmed on Thursday.
It maintained its fiscal 2025 outlook of a single-digit percentage year-on-year revenue drop, with a worst-case scenario of pretax profit at around one-third of the previous year's.