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Markets Edge · Intelligence Desk ISABELLA'S ISLAY

LVMH revenue falls 5% as Iran conflict erases $4.2bn in Middle East luxury demand

Organic growth lags Hermès and Richemont while Gulf allocators pause discretionary spend through Q3.

Published June 21, 2026 Source Seeking Alpha From the chopped neck
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LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton
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ISABELLA'S ISLAY · June 21, 2026

LVMH revenue falls 5% as Iran conflict erases $4.2bn in Middle East luxury demand

Organic growth lags Hermès and Richemont while Gulf allocators pause discretionary spend through Q3.

LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported 2025 second-quarter revenue down 5% year-over-year, with operating profit declining at a steeper rate the company has not yet disclosed in full detail. The Paris-based conglomerate attributed the miss to geopolitical tension in the Middle East, where the Iran conflict vaporized what had been the fastest-growing luxury consumer corridor outside mainland China. Gulf Cooperation Council markets—UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait—represented approximately €4.2 billion in trailing twelve-month sales before the escalation. That pipeline is now functionally closed.

The miss lands harder because LVMH is underperforming its tier-one peers on organic growth. Hermès posted 8% organic growth in the same period. Richemont logged 6%. LVMH's –5% headline figure includes a roughly –7% organic contraction once currency and M&A noise is stripped out. The delta matters. Allocators who rotate within European luxury had already begun overweighting Hermès and Richemont in Q1 on the thesis that vertical integration and exposure to jewelry over fashion would insulate margins. LVMH's Q2 print validates that positioning. The company's Fashion & Leather Goods division—Louis Vuitton, Dior, Fendi—saw double-digit declines in the Middle East and high-single-digit softness in Asia ex-China, where Chinese nationals traveling through Dubai and Doha had been material top-line contributors.

The normalization LVMH projected in its February guidance has not materialized. Management expected Middle East demand to stabilize by mid-year and Chinese consumer confidence to recover as Beijing's stimulus measures took hold. Neither happened. China's luxury spend remains 18% below 2019 levels in real terms, and the Iran war has pushed Gulf-region store traffic down 40% since March. What LVMH is facing is not a dip but a structural reset in two markets that together accounted for 31% of group revenue in 2023. The company has not yet announced store closures or workforce reductions, but comparable margin pressure suggests both are under internal review. LVMH's operating margin in Fashion & Leather Goods contracted 320 basis points year-over-year, the widest quarterly spread since COVID lockdowns.

Operators should watch three specific pressure points over the next 90 days. First, whether LVMH begins selective store consolidations in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which would signal the company views the Gulf contraction as multi-year rather than episodic. Second, how aggressively the company leans into price increases in Europe and the U.S. to defend margin—early indications suggest 4-6% hikes across key SKUs in Q3. Third, whether Chinese stimulus measures announced in late June translate into observable pickup in Hainan duty-free sales by September, which would provide the first hard evidence that domestic luxury demand is recovering. Richemont and Hermès will report earnings in the next three weeks, and any divergence in their China commentary versus LVMH's will move capital allocation across the sector.

Luxury stocks rallied 5% intraday on reports of a proposed U.S.-Iran peace framework, then gave back 3% by close as details remained vague. The market is pricing in hope, not clarity.

The takeaway
LVMH's **–5%** revenue print and margin compression confirm Gulf demand destruction is structural, not tactical—watch for store closures in UAE and Saudi Arabia within **90 days**.
lvmhluxurymiddle eastiran conflicthermèsrichemont
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