Lagerfeld's Art, Furniture Collections to Be Auctioned in Monaco in Autumn

Karl Lagerfeld. (Reuters)
Karl Lagerfeld. (Reuters)
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Lagerfeld's Art, Furniture Collections to Be Auctioned in Monaco in Autumn

Karl Lagerfeld. (Reuters)
Karl Lagerfeld. (Reuters)

Late German fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld’s collections of artwork and furniture will be sold at auction in Monaco this autumn, auction house Sotheby’s said in a statement.

Sotheby’s said it will take about two months to take an inventory of all the objects in eight Lagerfeld residences in France and Monaco.

Lagerfeld, who died Feb. 19, 2019, was a compulsive collector who also regularly sold some of his collections throughout his lifetime. A collection of Art Deco furniture and objects sold by Sotheby’s in 2003 raised close to 7 million euros.

Sotheby’s said it was too soon to estimate how much the auction might raise.

“We are just starting with the inventory. In sales of collections of such major global personalities, the value of the objects is closely linked to their provenance,” Sotheby’s France vice-president Pierre Mothes told Reuters.

In 2009, the sale of objects that had belonged to designer Yves Saint Laurent and his companion Pierre Bergé had raised 373 millions euros.



Ferragamo Shares Boosted after Confirmation of 2024 Forecasts

A view of Italian luxury fashion house Salvatore Ferragamo's logo at a store in Milan, Italy, March 6, 2024. (Reuters)
A view of Italian luxury fashion house Salvatore Ferragamo's logo at a store in Milan, Italy, March 6, 2024. (Reuters)
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Ferragamo Shares Boosted after Confirmation of 2024 Forecasts

A view of Italian luxury fashion house Salvatore Ferragamo's logo at a store in Milan, Italy, March 6, 2024. (Reuters)
A view of Italian luxury fashion house Salvatore Ferragamo's logo at a store in Milan, Italy, March 6, 2024. (Reuters)

Ferragamo shares jumped on Tuesday after the Italian luxury group confirmed its full year profitability forecast, despite the announcement of a likely impairment writedown in the range of 70-90 million euros.

The group confirmed the guidance at a time of uncertainty for the luxury industry, a Milan-based trader said. He added that the writedown has only an accounting impact.

Shares in Ferragamo were up almost 6% at 0915 GMT.

Ferragamo's stock has lost almost half of its value in the last year and its market capitalization slipped below 1 billion euros ($1.05 billion).

Purchases are driven by attractive valuations, with the stock close to an all-time low, another trader said.

Salvatore Ferragamo said late on Monday that an impairment test would likely result in writedowns of 70-90 million euros, mainly deriving from store lease agreements.

The group, which is struggling with a turnaround under CEO Marco Gobbetti, added that these impairment assumptions will not result in any financial payout and it confirmed the group's operating profit forecasts.

Analysts at Equita, who rate the stock as "Hold", added a note of caution after the statement.

"The need for these write-downs signals less visibility on the prospects of improvement of the group's results in the medium term," they said.

Ferragamo didn't provide detailed full year guidance, but in October it said that the operating profit this year would be at the lowest end of analyst estimates, meaning around 30 million euros.