LVMH reported Q2 revenues down 4.7% year-over-year to €19.8bn, missing consensus by €1.1bn. Kering fell 9.2% to €4.3bn. Hermès, the sector's cleaner name, posted growth of 3.1% to €3.6bn—its slowest quarter since 2020. The miss centers on two markets: the Middle East, where allocators had priced in a snapback, and China, where demand refuses to unlock despite easing comparisons.
The Middle East, which had grown 18% annually for LVMH between 2021 and 2024, contracted 11% in Q2 2025. Geopolitical volatility—Iran war spillover, Gulf capital-flight concerns—pulled high-net-worth individuals out of discretionary spend. Kering's Gucci and Saint Laurent franchises, which derive 22% of revenues from the region, saw store traffic fall 28% in April and May. Hermès, less exposed at 14%, held better but still recorded its first Middle East decline in seven years. China, meanwhile, delivered flat growth for LVMH and Kering, down from the +6% to +8% range analysts had modeled. Mainland same-store sales were negative; Hainan duty-free, once a reliable lever, fell 5%. The wealthy Chinese consumer has not returned to aspiration-driven purchasing. They buy Hermès Birkin bags on allocation, but they are not walking into LVMH's Dior or Kering's Bottega Veneta.
This is the sector's first failed recovery attempt in a decade. European luxury had stumbled before—2015's China slowdown, 2020's pandemic closure—but always regained trajectory within two quarters. This time, the thesis was that Middle Eastern wealth and Chinese re-opening would offset American softness. That thesis is now off the table. LVMH's operating margin compressed 240 basis points to 24.1%. Kering's fell 310 basis points to 19.8%. Hermès held 39.2%, down 40 basis points, because its waitlist model insulates pricing. The margin pressure comes from unsold spring/summer inventory and fixed costs in a store network built for +8% annual growth. LVMH has 4,800 stores; Kering has 1,510. Neither is built to shrink gracefully.
Operators should watch three things. First, LVMH's June same-store sales in Europe, reported mid-July, will show whether American tourists are spending after the dollar's recent softness. Second, Kering's Gucci reset—new creative director Sabato De Sarno's fourth collection launches in September—will either stabilize the brand or confirm it needs 18 months of markdown and repositioning. Third, any Iran-U.S. détente that eases Gulf tensions could return €2bn to €3bn in Middle East luxury demand within 90 days; the spending is deferrred, not destroyed, if the wealth stays in place. Chinese stimulus, by contrast, has shown no ability to move this consumer segment. Luxury is now a geopolitical trade, not a demographic one.
Hermès will end the year with revenue growth near 5%. LVMH and Kering will be flat to slightly negative. The sector's €420bn market capitalization has priced in recovery three times since January 2025; it has been wrong three times.
The takeaway
Middle East luxury demand fell 11% in Q2; China stayed flat; the sector's recovery thesis is now geopolitical, not consumer-driven.
luxurylvmhkeringhermesmiddle-eastchina
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