LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported third-quarter revenue of €19.08 billion, marking the first meaningful inflection after eighteen months of sequential deceleration across hard luxury. Organic revenue growth reached +2% year-over-year, a modest figure that nonetheless breaks the pattern established since Q1 2023, when Chinese reopening euphoria failed to materialize into sustained demand. The Fashion & Leather Goods division—responsible for 48% of group revenue—delivered +5% organic growth, driven by Louis Vuitton's recalibrated product velocity and selective price increases on Monogram canvas pieces. Watches & Jewelry grew +7%, propelled by Tiffany's US engagement ring cycle and Asian tourist spend returning to European flagships.
The stabilization arrives against a backdrop that has punished luxury equities for five consecutive quarters. LVMH's stock traded at €665 per share at quarter-end, still -15% below its April 2023 peak of €783, when the market priced in a Chinese consumer renaissance that evaporated by summer. What changed: US equity markets added $7.2 trillion in household wealth during Q3, the wealth effect visible in September point-of-sale data from Fifth Avenue and Rodeo Drive flagships. China's contribution shifted from contraction to flat, a +8 percentage point swing that required no government stimulus—just the exhaustion of post-lockdown spending fatigue among the top 2 million households that matter for hard luxury.
The second-order effect allocators need to track is margin architecture. LVMH maintained a 38.6% operating margin in Fashion & Leather Goods, down 40 basis points from the prior year but stable sequentially, meaning the company absorbed input cost inflation and preserved pricing power without resorting to outlet acceleration. Selective Distribution—the Sephora and DFS duty-free network—grew +6%, indicating that aspirational luxury (the $150-$800 basket) is outpacing trophy pieces, a class rotation that historically precedes broader sector strength by two quarters. Perfumes & Cosmetics grew +4%, a muted figure that reflects Dior's deliberate pullback from promotional intensity in Asian travel retail, where margin quality had deteriorated.
Operators and allocators should watch three forward indicators over the next ninety days. First, whether Hermès reports similar US acceleration when it releases Q3 results in late October; Hermès grew +11% in Q2 while LVMH contracted, so convergence would confirm a sector trend rather than an LVMH-specific recovery. Second, whether Chinese Golden Week spend in early October shows sequential improvement in average transaction value, not just traffic—LVMH's China stabilization came from the top 5% of customers resuming pre-2023 purchase frequency, a fragile dynamic. Third, whether LVMH's Watches & Jewelry momentum persists through the US holiday quarter, given that Tiffany's +12% US growth in Q3 relied partly on delayed engagements from 2023 now converting, a one-time tailwind.
The luxury sector's return to positive organic growth does not erase the €340 billion in market capitalization destroyed across European luxury stocks since April 2023, but it establishes a credible floor. LVMH's ability to grow Fashion & Leather Goods at +5% without sacrificing margin or accelerating outlet penetration suggests pricing power remains intact among the top 10 million global households. The next test is whether this modest growth can compound for three consecutive quarters—the minimum threshold for institutional allocators to rotate back into a sector they spent eighteen months abandoning.