The Stoxx Europe 600 Personal & Household Goods Index added 11.2% since December 12, pushing forward price-to-earnings multiples back to 27.8x from 23.4x in mid-November. LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE reports third-quarter results January 28. Kering SA follows January 30. The move happened without material improvement in Chinese consumer sentiment readings or pricing power confirmation from preliminary luxury watch export data.
The rally began after December vehicle registration data from Europe showed resilient high-end automotive demand, with Porsche AG deliveries up 4.1% year-over-year in premium segments. That translated into sector optimism, but the compression happened faster than the underlying fundamentals shifted. Hermès International SCA trades at 48.3x forward earnings versus its three-year median of 44.6x. Richemont sits at 22.1x against a 19.8x average. The price action reflects positioning ahead of earnings, not confirmation of pricing power restoration.
What matters is whether LVMH can demonstrate that its Fashion & Leather Goods division—which generates 48% of group operating profit—held gross margins above 68% in Q3 despite promotional activity increasing across aspirational luxury categories in Asia. If margins compressed more than 120 basis points, the multiple will not hold. The company guided for organic revenue growth between 5% and 7% for full-year 2025 during its September analyst day. Consensus sits at 6.2%. That leaves 40 basis points of room before disappointment triggers re-pricing.
Allocators should watch three specific releases. LVMH's January 28 report will show whether Selective Retailing—primarily DFS Group and Sephora—improved sequentially from Q2's negative 2% organic growth. Kering's January 30 numbers will clarify if Gucci stabilized after posting negative 25% comparable sales growth in Q2. Brunello Cucinelli SpA, reporting February 5, will indicate whether the ultra-high-net-worth segment—less sensitive to macro—continued double-digit growth. If all three miss, the sector re-rates 300-400 basis points lower within a week.
The sector's $47 billion market cap gain since mid-December happened while Chinese New Year travel booking data showed luxury destination hotel reservations up only 2.8% year-over-year, below the 6-9% range that historically correlates with sustained luxury goods demand recovery in Greater China. That geography represents 29% of LVMH's revenue. Ford Motor Company's January 15 earnings showed U.S. consumer credit stress rising in sub-prime auto, but prime FICO scores above 740—the luxury buyer cohort—remained stable with delinquency rates at 0.6%, unchanged from Q2. The U.S. luxury customer is intact. The Chinese luxury customer is not yet confirmed as returning at price.
Earnings calls will reveal whether brands absorbed tariff impacts in gross margin or passed them through. LVMH's effective tax rate guidance and Kering's inventory day figures—both disclosed in footnotes—will show whether the sector is preparing for a softer Q1 2026 or expecting acceleration. The multiple already prices in the acceleration.