Hermes Sales Rise 23% in Q1, Boosted by China

A couple walk with Hermes shopping bags as they leave an Hermes store in Paris March 21, 2013. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/Files
A couple walk with Hermes shopping bags as they leave an Hermes store in Paris March 21, 2013. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/Files
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Hermes Sales Rise 23% in Q1, Boosted by China

A couple walk with Hermes shopping bags as they leave an Hermes store in Paris March 21, 2013. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/Files
A couple walk with Hermes shopping bags as they leave an Hermes store in Paris March 21, 2013. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/Files

Sales at Birkin bag maker Hermes rose 23% in the first quarter, above market expectations, as wealthy shoppers in China and Europe splurged on luxury fashion and accessories despite higher prices and global market turmoil.

Sales for the three months ending in March came to 3.38 billion euros. The increase of 23%, at constant exchange rates, beat a Visible Alpha consensus of 15% growth.

Hermes finance chief Eric du Halgouet told journalists store traffic in the United States, where rival LVMH earlier this week flagged softer demand for fashion and leather goods, continued to rise and trends in April remained positive.

"What we're seeing in the United States is globally an increase in (store) traffic, the trends we've seen in April remain favorable, with, again, very dynamic traffic," he said.

"We obviously remain vigilant as far as macro trends are concerned... but we have not seen a slowdown so far."

Hermes raised prices by around 7% at the start of the year, a higher rate than its usual 2-3% annual increase.



Puig Shares Drop after Withdrawal of Some Batches of Charlotte Tilbury Spray

A woman walks past the logo of Luxury beauty and fashion company Puig (PUIG.MC) at the entrance of its headquarters in Barcelona · Reuters
A woman walks past the logo of Luxury beauty and fashion company Puig (PUIG.MC) at the entrance of its headquarters in Barcelona · Reuters
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Puig Shares Drop after Withdrawal of Some Batches of Charlotte Tilbury Spray

A woman walks past the logo of Luxury beauty and fashion company Puig (PUIG.MC) at the entrance of its headquarters in Barcelona · Reuters
A woman walks past the logo of Luxury beauty and fashion company Puig (PUIG.MC) at the entrance of its headquarters in Barcelona · Reuters

Shares in Puig dropped sharply in early Friday trade after the luxury beauty and fashion company said its Charlotte Tilbury brand was voluntarily withdrawing select batches of its make-up setting spray.
Puig, which listed in Madrid in May, said on Thursday the withdrawal was expected to impact performance of its makeup segment, but was not expected to have a "material" impact on its overall full-year performance.
The company said that a routine product testing found an isolated quality issue in a limited number of batches, which did not make the product unsafe.
It added that no other Charlotte Tilbury products were affected.
Makeup and skincare brand Charlotte Tilbury, known for its "Pillow Talk" make-up collection, was one of Puig's top three brands last year, according to its annual report.
Makeup contributed 18% of its net income in 2023, while skincare accounted for 10%.
JPMorgan analysts said the withdrawal could have as much as mid single digit additional impact on makeup like-for-like growth in the fourth quarter.
They added there could be a potential spillover into the first quarter of 2025, depending on the speed of product replacement.
The firm, which also owns perfume brands Rabanne, Carolina Herrera and Jean Paul Gaultier, said it was confident in achieving its goals for 2024, including a stable EBITDA margin compared with 2023.
Shares fell as much as 9% but recovered some losses and by 0902 GMT were down 3.5%, among top fallers on the Europe-wide STOXX 600 index.