Hermès dropped 40% following quarterly results that formalized what allocators already suspected: the Middle East has shifted from growth engine to structural liability. The Paris-based maker of Birkin bags reported slowing sales growth, with management citing "uncertain recovery path" in a region that had been expanding faster than China through 2023. LVMH, which reports consolidated results across 75 brands, posted a 5% revenue decline for 2025, with profits falling faster. The sector has shed roughly €80 billion in market capitalization since tensions escalated in the Gulf six months ago.
The repricing is clinical. Middle Eastern buyers—concentrated in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar—had accounted for 18-22% of incremental luxury growth since 2020, according to Bain's annual study. That cohort bought at full price, skewed heavily toward leather goods and haute joaillerie, and transacted in euros or dollars without currency hedging complexity. Hermès had been particularly exposed, with an estimated 28% of Kelly and Birkin bag sales flowing through Gulf distributors or direct flagship stores in Riyadh and Dubai. LVMH's watches and jewelry division, anchored by Bulgari and TAG Heuer, had similar regional concentration. When demand disappeared, it took the highest-margin revenue with it.
The structural issue is substitution risk. Chinese consumers, who drove luxury's last super-cycle from 2010 to 2019, are spending domestically or not at all. American buyers remain present but price-sensitive, trading down from Hermès to Loro Piana or skipping seasonal purchases entirely. European demand is flat, constrained by energy costs and fiscal tightening. The Middle East was the residual swing buyer, and its absence leaves no replacing cohort. Richemont, which owns Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels, has outperformed by 900 basis points year-to-date, largely because its jewelry positioning skews older and wealthier—demographics less affected by sudden sentiment shifts. Hermès and LVMH had been optimizing for younger, aspirational Gulf buyers who now face capital controls and repatriation pressure.
Allocators should track three sequences. First, whether proposed U.S.-Iran diplomacy—which briefly lifted LVMH 5% intraday—translates to sanctions relief and resumed regional liquidity by Q3. Second, Hermès's June wholesale orders, which will clarify whether distributors expect H2 recovery or are cutting inventory further. Third, LVMH's cost restructuring, expected to be detailed in the April earnings call, which will reveal whether management views this as a cyclical reset or permanent demand destruction. The company's organic growth has lagged Richemont and Hermès by 320 basis points over the past twelve months, suggesting operational issues beyond geography.
The market now prices luxury as a slow-growth, high-beta sector with no near-term reacceleration catalyst. Hermès, trading at 28x forward earnings after the drawdown, still commands a premium to LVMH's 19x, but the gap has compressed 40% in six months. The tell will be whether Hermès holds discipline on artificial scarcity or opens production to chase revenue—a decision that defines the next five years of pricing power.
The takeaway
Middle East luxury demand collapsed, erasing **€80bn** in sector value and leaving no substitute buyer cohort in near term.
luxuryhermeslvmhmiddle eastearningsrepricing
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