Fashion House Smcp’s Bondholders Expect Initial Bids for Their Stake by Mid-may - Sources

A Maje label is pictured on clothes inside a Maje luxury clothing store, operated by SMCP Group, in Paris, France, December 21, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
A Maje label is pictured on clothes inside a Maje luxury clothing store, operated by SMCP Group, in Paris, France, December 21, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
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Fashion House Smcp’s Bondholders Expect Initial Bids for Their Stake by Mid-may - Sources

A Maje label is pictured on clothes inside a Maje luxury clothing store, operated by SMCP Group, in Paris, France, December 21, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
A Maje label is pictured on clothes inside a Maje luxury clothing store, operated by SMCP Group, in Paris, France, December 21, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

Bondholders in French fashion group SMCP (SMCP.PA), the owner of labels such as Sandro and Maje, are expecting first-round, non-binding bids for their 37% stake in the company by mid-May, said two people with knowledge of the transaction.

The bondholders, which include asset manager BlackRock and private equity firm Carlyle (CG.O), appointed investment bank Lazard Frères SAS to advise on the sale that kicked off in March.

The 37% stake is worth around 227 million euros ($251 million) based on SMCP's market value of 613.8 million euros at Monday's close, Reuters reported.

Potential buyers include private equity funds and other fashion retailers, said one of the people, who declined to be identified as the information is confidential.

The interested parties are taking into consideration that their acquisition of the stake would trigger a general takeover of the entire company and therefore are assessing the deal on that basis, the person added.

Rothschild & Co is advising SMCP in the sale, the company said in March.

Alastair Beveridge and Daniel Imison of AlixPartners UK LLP, who act as an intermediary for the bondholders, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

SMCP and the two advisers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The bondholders became equity owners in the French company after European TopSoho, a unit of Shandong Ruyi (002193.SZ), failed to meet a debt obligation of 250 million euros ($265.95 million) exchangeable for shares in SMCP in 2021.

The Chinese conglomerate, which embarked on a buying spree in 2015, acquiring labels including Aquascutum, Cerruti 1881 and Savile Row tailor Gieves & Hawkes, sought to build an empire to rival that of luxury behemoth LVMH, but struggled under the debt of its purchases.

SMCP reported 1.2 billion euros in sales for 2022, up 16.1% year-on-year and 266.6 million euros in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, up 8.5% from 2021.



Hermes to Hike US Prices to Offset Tariff Impact

FILED - 22 October 2020, Hamburg: The Hermes brand logo, can be seen at a Douglas store on Jungfernstieg. French luxury fashion brand on Thursday reported a rise in revenue for the first quarter, helped by growth across all geographical areas. Photo: Daniel Reinhardt/dpa
FILED - 22 October 2020, Hamburg: The Hermes brand logo, can be seen at a Douglas store on Jungfernstieg. French luxury fashion brand on Thursday reported a rise in revenue for the first quarter, helped by growth across all geographical areas. Photo: Daniel Reinhardt/dpa
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Hermes to Hike US Prices to Offset Tariff Impact

FILED - 22 October 2020, Hamburg: The Hermes brand logo, can be seen at a Douglas store on Jungfernstieg. French luxury fashion brand on Thursday reported a rise in revenue for the first quarter, helped by growth across all geographical areas. Photo: Daniel Reinhardt/dpa
FILED - 22 October 2020, Hamburg: The Hermes brand logo, can be seen at a Douglas store on Jungfernstieg. French luxury fashion brand on Thursday reported a rise in revenue for the first quarter, helped by growth across all geographical areas. Photo: Daniel Reinhardt/dpa

French luxury group Hermes said Thursday it would hike its prices in the United States to offset the impact of 10-percent import tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump.

Famous for its Birkin handbag, silk scarves and leather goods, the increases would take effect on May 1, said the group's finance chief, Eric Halgouet.

Halgouet did not say by how much prices would be raised, but he said the move would "fully offset" the tariffs impact, AFP reported.

"It will be a complementary price increase that we are currently finalizing, but which will allow us to neutralize this impact," he told reporters during a quarterly earnings presentation.

Hermes, also known for the "H" logo on its belts and other goods, usually raises prices once a year and had already announced worldwide increase of between six and seven percent earlier in 2025.

Hermes overtook French rival LVMH as the world's most valuable luxury group this week after the share price of the Louis Vuitton maker sank on disappointing earnings.

Hermes posted global sales of 4.1 billion euros ($4.7 billion) in the first quarter of 2025, an 8.5 percent increase from the same period last year.

Sales in the Americas region jumped 13.3 percent to 695 million euros, with double-digit growth in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Brazil, Halgouet said.

US sales were disrupted by wildfires in Los Angeles, which forced the closure of two shops for several days, and snow storms in other states.

Trump imposed a 10 percent tariff on imports from around the world this month, but he delayed higher duties on dozens of other countries, including a 20 percent levy for goods from the European Union.