DFS Group sales still “held back by prevailing international conditions” in first quarter

LVMH brand Guerlain at DFS Galaxy Macau; the Macau market remains subdued with modest levels of visitor traffic from Mainland China

INTERNATIONAL. LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton today reported first-quarter revenues of €20.3 billion, down year-on-year by -2% on a reported basis and -3% in organic terms.

Within this, Selective Retailing, which includes DFS Group (co-owned by LVMH and Co-Founder Robert Miller) posted flat reported revenue (-1% organic) of €4,189 million.

LVMH said in a statement that DFS performance was “again held back by prevailing international conditions”. The travel retailer’s revenue performance continues to reflect low levels of visitor traffic in Hong Kong and Macau, noted LVMH. As we reported last November, DFS Group is to cease trading at its upscale Fondaco dei Tedeschi store in Venice as it opted not to renew the lease that ends by September 2025.

Revenue by business group in Q1; click to enlarge

More broadly, LVMH said the wider business showed “good resilience and maintained its powerful innovative momentum despite a disrupted geopolitical and economic environment”.

Among other business units, The Wines & Spirits segment saw revenue decline -9% on an organic basis (-8% reported), with Champagne down slightly, reflecting a normalisation of demand.

Assessing wines & spirits, the group noted “uncertainties remain surrounding tariffs” and said that it had held stock in anticipation of disruption.

The Fashion & Leather Goods business group posted a -5% slide in revenues year-on-year (-4% reported) while Perfumes & Cosmetics delivered a similar performance to Q1 2024. The Watches & Jewelry arm was flat in organic terms and up +1% on a reported basis.

By region, Europe achieved growth on a constant consolidation scope and currency basis. The USA saw a slight decline, despite a good performance in Fashion & Leather Goods and in Watches & Jewelry. Japan was down compared to a high basis in the first quarter of 2024, which had been boosted by strong growth in Chinese consumer spending. The rest of Asia saw trends comparable to 2024, with organic sales falling -11%

In what it described as a “disrupted geopolitical and economic environment”, LVMH said it remains “vigilant and confident at the start of the year”.

Of the wider market at time when the US has announced (and then delayed) tariffs on many trading partners, CFO Cécile Cabanis told an investor call: “We continue to lack visibility on external factors…things are changing quickly, sometimes every hour.”

She added: “We don’t have much to report on any change to underlying trends. Except for softer demand in Cognac and beauty (in the USA), everything else held up well compared to Q1 last year.

“In Fashion & Leathergoods we see solid growth but we do know that clientele are more vulnerable in negative cycles, and this may have had some impact in recent weeks.”

On whether the group would decide to meet the potential US tariff challenge by increasing luxury goods production in the US, Cabanis said: “About one-third of LV and the majority of Tiffany that is sold in the US has US production, so for both we can increase capacity for that market. It is not something you can do overnight. We are not contemplating any radical change today but we could do it.”

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