Luxury Group Richemont Makes Van Cleef Jewellery Boss New CEO

The logo of the luxury goods company Richemont is pictured at its headquarters in Bellevue near Geneva, Switzerland, June 2, 2022. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse Purchase Licensing Rights
The logo of the luxury goods company Richemont is pictured at its headquarters in Bellevue near Geneva, Switzerland, June 2, 2022. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse Purchase Licensing Rights
TT

Luxury Group Richemont Makes Van Cleef Jewellery Boss New CEO

The logo of the luxury goods company Richemont is pictured at its headquarters in Bellevue near Geneva, Switzerland, June 2, 2022. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse Purchase Licensing Rights
The logo of the luxury goods company Richemont is pictured at its headquarters in Bellevue near Geneva, Switzerland, June 2, 2022. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse Purchase Licensing Rights

Luxury group Cartier-owner Richemont announced a rejig of its top management on Friday, promoting the head of its Van Cleef & Arpels jewellery brand to group chief executive, saying it was returning to a more traditional management set-up.

Nicolas Bos, who has led a sales surge at Van Cleef, will take over from Jerome Lambert, who will stay on at Richemont as Chief Operating Officer.

The Swiss-listed company made the announcement as it reported a smaller than expected fall in fourth quarter sales. It shares rose 6% on the Zurich exchange.

Chairman Johann Rupert said that the company was reinstating the traditional CEO role, folding the jewellery brands into the rest of the role's responsibilities, which also covers high-end Swiss watches, fashion and accessories, Reuters reported.

He noted it was important to be led by an executive from the "client-facing side”.

"If you’re going to run Richemont you’d better understand the consumer" Rupert told analysts, who were enthusiastic about the promotion.

"Nicolas has developed Van Cleef & Arpels into a power house, and, in our view, is entirely credible as the future leader of the Group," said Bernstein analyst Luca Solca.

The announcement came as Richemont, whose Swiss watch brands include Piaget and Jaeger-LeCoultre, said sales fell 1% to 4.80 billion euros ($5.21 billion) in the three months to the end of March.

In constant currencies, sales rose 2%,which was a slowdown from the 8% rate in the previous quarter but was slightly ahead of a consensus forecast for 4.78 billion euros cited by RBC.

The performance confirmed a downward trend in the luxury sector which has been buffeted by tepid Chinese demand and comparisons with last year, when the lifting of COVID-19 curbs in China supercharged sales.

Globally, customers have also become more selective about expensive purchases as the costs of living rises.

"Overall a decent set of numbers and final quarter constant currency growth is reassuring given the souring sentiment among luxury goods buyers and a difficult comparable," said Jon Cox at Kepler Cheuvreux.

However, weakness in the Asia Pacific in the final quarter, down 12%, is worrying, he added noting that unless the China consumer comes back, demand for luxury goods is going to be more muted for the industry than otherwise expected.



Burberry’s Strong US Sales Offset Iran War Impact in Europe

A Burberry trench coat with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)
A Burberry trench coat with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)
TT

Burberry’s Strong US Sales Offset Iran War Impact in Europe

A Burberry trench coat with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)
A Burberry trench coat with the Burberry label is displayed at the Burberry flagship store in Regent Street, London, Britain, September 8, 2025. (Reuters)

Burberry's recovery continued in the April-June quarter thanks to strong sales in the US and China, while it said conflict in the Middle East dented ‌tourist spending ‌in Europe.

CEO Joshua ‌Schulman, ⁠who has led ⁠a turnaround since taking the helm two years ago, has said he is focused on the two "must-win" markets of the ⁠US and China as ‌he ‌tries to revive the luxury brand.

The strategy ‌appeared to be working, ‌with Burberry saying on Friday that Gen Z customers in China helped sales increase 9% ‌in that key market from a year earlier, while ⁠sales ⁠in the Americas grew 12% as the brand attracted new customers.

Overall, comparable store sales in Burberry's first financial quarter grew 5%, in line with analysts' expectations, while sales in the Europe and Middle East region fell 3%.


Frasers Withholds Outlook as Hugo Boss and Accent Bids Cloud Forecast

People walk past a Flannels store in London, Britain, December 4, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
People walk past a Flannels store in London, Britain, December 4, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
TT

Frasers Withholds Outlook as Hugo Boss and Accent Bids Cloud Forecast

People walk past a Flannels store in London, Britain, December 4, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
People walk past a Flannels store in London, Britain, December 4, 2025. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

British retailer Frasers on Thursday withheld its fiscal 2027 outlook, saying ongoing takeover bids for German fashion house Hugo Boss and Australian footwear chain Accent made it difficult to forecast the year ahead.

The announcement, which accompanied news that the group had missed profit forecasts for the year to April 26, ‌sparked a near 6% ‌drop in the Mike Ashley-owned sportswear and ‌fashion retailer's ⁠shares in early ⁠trade.

The results highlight the growing complexity of CEO Michael Murray's acquisition-led strategy, which has expanded the Sports Direct owner's global footprint but also generated heavy goodwill writedowns and operating costs.

"We think (Frasers') complexity and its lack of liquidity will continue to weigh on its valuation, and we think its proposed acquisition of Hugo Boss may add ⁠to execution risk and its financial leverage," said ‌RBC Capital Markets analyst Richard Chamberlain.

The ‌group said adjusted pre-tax profit fell 4% to £538 million ($727.9 million) in fiscal 2026, ‌missing its own forecast of £550 million to £600 million and analysts' ‌consensus of £564.2 million, according to LSEG data.

BIDS YET TO YIELD RESULTS

Hugo Boss earlier this month rejected Frasers' takeover bid as "financially inadequate", while an independent committee of Accent's board also recommended that a takeover proposal from the group ‌be rejected.

Frasers booked £249.9 million of impairment charges in fiscal 2026, up sharply from a £9.6 million reversal ⁠in the prior ⁠year, after fully writing down goodwill assigned to Nordic sports retailer XXL, Dutch chain Twinsport and own-brand Everlast.

It also partially impaired goodwill relating to its South African acquisition Holdsport due to weaker growth expectations.

Frasers has also been hit by challenging market conditions, subdued consumer confidence and excess inventory in recent months, which it said continued through the second half of the year and into the starting months of fiscal 2027.

"These pressures are weighing on the entire sector, creating a prolonged and challenging environment, meaning the full potential of this progress has not yet been realised," the company said in a statement.


Kering Appoints LVMH Fragrance Chief Spitzer as New Bottega Veneta CEO

The logo of French luxury group Kering is seen at the company's headquarters in Paris, France, April 24, 2025. (Reuters)
The logo of French luxury group Kering is seen at the company's headquarters in Paris, France, April 24, 2025. (Reuters)
TT

Kering Appoints LVMH Fragrance Chief Spitzer as New Bottega Veneta CEO

The logo of French luxury group Kering is seen at the company's headquarters in Paris, France, April 24, 2025. (Reuters)
The logo of French luxury group Kering is seen at the company's headquarters in Paris, France, April 24, 2025. (Reuters)

French luxury group Kering has appointed Romain Spitzer as the new CEO of Bottega Veneta, it said on Wednesday.

Spitzer, currently president and CEO of Fragrance Group LVMH Beauty, will ‌join the ‌Italian fashion ‌brand ⁠from September 1, the ⁠company said in a statement.

Bottega Veneta had been without a CEO since March 31.

The previous ⁠CEO, Bartolomeo Rongone, left ‌the ‌label earlier this year to ‌lead Italy's Moncler.

Spitzer ‌is a fragrance industry veteran.

His career includes stints at Jean Paul Gaultier, ‌Yves Saint Laurent, Christian Dior and LVMH.

He ⁠was ⁠promoted in October 2025 to lead the Fragrance business at LVMH Beauty.

Kering said Spitzer will focus on enhancing Bottega Veneta's desirability, deepening connections with clients worldwide and driving retail excellence across markets.