skip to main content

Richemont sales boosted by China bounceback

Sales at the owner of brands such as Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels grew 22% at constant rates
Sales at the owner of brands such as Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels grew 22% at constant rates

Luxury goods group Richemont has today beaten expectations after high demand from Chinese consumers for jewellery and watches boosted sales over the three months to March 31, sending shares to record highs.

Sales at the owner of brands such as Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels grew 22% at constant rates, lifted by strong growth in the Asia Pacific and Europe, as well as brisk growth in the US.

"China is doing much better," Chairman Johann Rupert said in a call with journalists.

Shares rose more than 5% in early trade and hit a record of 158.50 Swiss francs ($178.31).

The sector's biggest luxury players, LVMH and Birkin bag maker Hermes, have benefited strongly from a rebound in China following three years of disruptions and closures due to Covid-19 lockdowns, as reflected in first-quarter global sales growth of 17% and 23%, respectively.

Richemont's sales outpaced the highest estimates on the market, said Jean Philippe Bertschy, analyst with Vontobel, noting it pointed to a further polarisation between the performance of the strongest labels as prices rise.

"The polarisation between strong brands with iconic pieces and weaker ones continued unabated, and accelerated in recent months due to high inflation," said Bertschy.

Richemont, which also owns watch labels IWC and Vacheron Constantin, reported a 34% rise in operating profit for the fiscal year ending in March to €5.03 billion with a margin of 25.2%, above analyst expectations.

As part of an ongoing succession plan for long-serving members, the company named an American jewellery executive, Fiona Druckenmiller, to its board of directors while four other members will step down.

Rupert said the company had not received a direct approach by LVMH, Europe's most-valuable listed company, for its Cartier business, playing down speculation about a possible takeover or a tie-up with Kering.

"We're in constant dialogue and we respect each others’ independence," said Rupert, referring to LVMH CEO and Chairman Bernard Arnault.