Luxury shopper recovery faces four key headwinds

Luxury shopper recovery faces four key headwinds


The 19-story façade of the Louis Vuitton luxury store stands wrapped in a design reminiscent of their monogrammed trunks in Manhattan, New York City.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

High-end spenders are painting a mixed picture when it comes to the luxury market’s long-awaited recovery, with softer sales still weighing on company forecasts.

But better-than-feared results from bellwether fashion house LVMH moved luxury stocks higher Friday, as investors bet on the emergence of green shoots of recovery.

LVMH posted a 4% year-on-year drop in second quarter sales to 19.5 billion euros after the market close Thursday, slightly below a consensus forecast for a 3% decline.

“This was not a stellar quarter for LVMH,” Deutsche Bank’s Adam Cochrane, a luxury equity research analyst, wrote in a Friday note. “However, we see some glimmers of hope with a sequential improvement in cFX [constant currency] sales expected from 3Q onwards and most of the sales weakness related to weaker tourism.”

Here’s a look at four key trends to look out for as earnings season rolls on, with fresh numbers due next week from Kering, Hermes and Prada.

Japan weakness

U.S. sales spike

Mixed bag for luxury giant LVMH

“To tell you that this was driven by an anticipation of buying links to the tariffs? Honestly, I cannot tell you,” Roberto Eggs, Moncler’s chief business strategy and global market officer, said on an earnings call Wednesday.

Luxury companies have also been honing in on the U.S. market in recent quarters in a bid to compensate for continued soft demand in the key Chinese market.

Burberry CEO Joshua Schulman said the company’s recent U.S. growth indicated the “diversity of the luxury consumer that exists in that market,” from elite, high-spenders to high-traffic mall shoppers.

Price increases

New Kering CEO could 'make Gucci great again,' Barclays says

LVMH, on the other hand, said Thursday that prices rises would need to come with an “improvement in the product” or modest rebalancing around inflation.

However, the French luxury conglomerate then went on to cite price hikes among “several levers” at its disposal to counter the impact of tariffs.

It comes as the cost of luxury goods has risen by an average of 3% so far this year — the slowest pace since 2019 — according to UBS’ evidence lab, as brands have sought to reconcile consumer retention with higher input costs following a Covid-era surge in prices.

Product divergence

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