China’s Fosun snaps up France’s Lanvin in fashion expansion

China’s Fosun snaps up France’s Lanvin in fashion expansion
Models present creations by Lanvin during the women’s Fall-Winter 2017-2018 ready-to-wear collection fashion show in Paris. Chinese conglomerate Fosun snapped up the ailing French fashion label Lanvin on Feb. 22, 2018 and promised to help revive its fortunes. (AFP)
Updated 22 February 2018
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China’s Fosun snaps up France’s Lanvin in fashion expansion

China’s Fosun snaps up France’s Lanvin in fashion expansion

PARIS: Fosun is taking control of Lanvin, France’s oldest surviving couture label, in the Chinese conglomerate’s most prominent fashion investment yet.
Fosun, which owns French leisure company Club Med, is the latest Chinese firm to expand into fashion labels at a time when consumers in China — the world’s second biggest economy — are driving a global revival in luxury goods spending.
Lanvin, until now majority-owned by Taiwan-based media magnate Shaw-Lan Wang, had struggled financially in recent years after switching designers.
But the 129-year-old brand, named after founding couturiere Jeanne Lanvin, remains one of fashion’s best-known labels, and has long been considered an epitome of Parisian chic.
Fosun gave no financial details of the transaction. It said current shareholders — who include Wang, with 75 percent of the firm, and Swiss businessman Ralph Bartel, who has 25 percent -would retain a minority stake in Lanvin.
The Chinese group will invest around €100 million ($123 million) in the business, a source close to the matter said. Fosun added in a statement that with its resources Lanvin would “enter a new phase of expansion.”
The brand had enjoyed a revival under star designer Alber Elbaz, but his surprise sacking in 2015 marked a turning point for Lanvin, which changed artistic director twice but was still having trouble with slumping sales and facing a cash crunch.
Lanvin does not publish earnings. It made an €18.3 million loss in 2016, sources with knowledge of the situation had told Reuters. Losses had been forecast to rise to at least €27 million in 2017, they said.
Fosun saw off competition from Qatari investment fund Mayhoola, the owner of Italy’s Valentino, to take control of Lanvin, according to people with knowledge of the discussions.
Fosun already had stakes in Italian high-end menswear label Caruso and US knitwear firm St. John Knits and it said on Thursday that it had a mandate to “strategically deepen its root in this sector.”
China’s Shandong Ruyi — a shareholder in French group SMCP which owns the Sandro, Maje and Claudie Pierlot labels — has also been expanding its fashion empire. This month it took control of Swiss luxury shoe and accessories firm Bally.
The luxury fashion industry is still dominated by European firms, however, including French conglomerates LVMH, which owns Louis Vuitton, and Gucci-parent Kering.

- Reuters