Bouchra Jarrar Leaving Lanvin

Maybe they will sell themselves to LVMH or Kering...which is probably better. For once I actually see some merits of doing so, all along I am against all these consolidation but I guess Lanvin is no Hermes or Chanel.
 
^ That's a good idea. I suspect that Ms. Wang's hands will have to be cold before she lets go, though, and I just wonder whether there will be anything left to salvage at that point. Such a shame ... Paris's oldest fashion house too.
 
I like what she did with her own brand but it's not surprising that it ended like this at all.
 
At this point what sane designer would take the position at this house? After the messy firing of Alber and now this it's just asking from trouble to work for that crazy owner.
 
Maybe they will sell themselves to LVMH or Kering...which is probably better. For once I actually see some merits of doing so, all along I am against all these consolidation but I guess Lanvin is no Hermes or Chanel.

It could be a good solution. Mayhoola Group wanted buy Lanvin before, if i don't mistake. But i'm not sure Mrs. Shaw-Lan Wang will sell.
Seems as she doesn't care about Lanvin but same time want keep the brand for herself, must be a question of prestige, i guess?
 
Lanvin will have to really stand behind and INVEST in their Creative Director's vision if they want to have an Alessandro Michele/Hedi Slimane type of overhaul.

She was also just not the right person to lead the house. It will be interesting to see what happens to the house but I'm not sure I even care at this point.
 
At this point what sane designer would take the position at this house? After the messy firing of Alber and now this it's just asking from trouble to work for that crazy owner.

Quite.

In case anyone wanted to know where an obsession with saving face will get you ... here is one answer.
 
https://hypebeast.com/2018/2/lanvin-sale-buyout

guess it is time...I hope someone who is really rich and has a vision buys it, not Mayhoola, not LVMH and not Kering.

but fact that the last 2 didnt seem interested, if the rumors are in any way true, or just spreaded to make it cheap, is interesting.
 
Good grief, is it as bad as that? So all Madame Wang's talk about saving face, not helping much now, is it? It seems most of the fault lies with management and not the creative directors. I'm still convinced if Jarrar had all the resources and support, she would have made a killing. And I didn't outright hate Lapidus' collection (for a debut is was bad.)

Wouldn't surprise me if LVMH are the ones circling the brand like a vulture. Madame Wang should just cut her losses and sell it to someone like herself, no conglomerates!
 
EXCLUSIVE – Lanvin in talks with buyers after Elbaz wins more than 10 mln-euro settlement
By Astrid Wendlandt - 8 February 2018
China’s Fosun International and Qatar’s Mayhoola, which owns Valentino and Balmain, are competing to inject capital into Lanvin and buy control as France’s oldest fashion house could run out of cash as early as March, sources with first-hand knowledge of the matter have said.

Alber Elbaz - Francois Guillot. AFP

Luxury giants LVMH and Kering expressed interest when Lanvin was auctioned last fall but walked away, they added. Currently, Mayhoola is looking as “the most motivated” but a deal has not been signed yet, several sources said on condition of anonymity.

“It is a very complicated case but things will have to move relatively quickly in light of Lanvin’s financial situation,” one of the sources said.

Sales at Lanvin have more than halved in the past three years to less than 100 million euros as the French fashion house struggled to reinvent itself under two successive designers and find the right strategy after sacking its star designer Alber Elbaz in 2015.

Just before Christmas, Elbaz won his claim against Lanvin’s parent company, Jeanne Lanvin SA for having ousted him before his contract was due to end. Following a settlement through arbitration (an out-of-court procedure), Elbaz was awarded more than 10 million euros in compensation, several sources have said, which will put added pressure on Lanvin’s finances. However, Elbaz did not win a claim that he suffered a prejudice from having lost out on an opportunity to sell his stake to Mayhoola before he was ousted when a more than 400 million-euro-offer was on the table.

Elbaz, who joined Lanvin in 2001 after a short stint at Yves Saint Laurent and his successful revamp of Guy Laroche, was widely regarded as the driving force behind the brand’s revival. During his 14 year-tenure, Elbaz developed a new, modern look for the brand which became known for its skimpy, colourful, cocktail dresses adorned with chunky jewellery. However, sales growth at Lanvin had started to slow down before Elbaz was ousted, several industry observers have remarked.

Elbaz borrowed money from Lanvin’s controlling shareholder, Chinese media magnate Shaw-Lan Wang based in Taiwan, to purchase shares and had amassed a stake of around 20 percent in a unit that indirectly controls Lanvin. It is not clear whether Elbaz still has a sizeable indirect minority stake in Lanvin since there remained unsettled debts between him and Mrs Wang after he left. Elbaz was ousted by Mrs Wang after a violent row during a boardroom meeting, several sources said. Lanvin and Elbaz declined to comment.

As of December 15, Lanvin disposed of a little over 15 million euros to pay salaries and suppliers until the end of February-early March, several sources said. The company’s consolidated sales have gone from 206.7 million euros in 2014 to 97 million euros in 2017 and it has racked up losses totalling 27 million euros. Lanvin started losing money in 2016. Last year, auditors filed a warning to a Paris commercial court about the company’s troubled finances. To save money, Lanvin cancelled its show at Paris Fashion Week scheduled for February 28 and replaced it by a presentation, the French Couture and Fashion Federation confirmed this week.

Lavin's boutique in Paris - Google.com

Founded in 1889, Lanvin is one of France’s last major independent fashion labels, in the same league as family-controlled Hermès and Chanel in terms of prestige and heritage. It has attracted much interest from buyers over the years as it is the oldest French fashion brand still in activity, with full access to its archives.

Kering and Mayhoola declined comment while LVMH did not immediately respond to requests for comment nor did Fosun International, a group controlled by Chinese billionaire Guo Guangchang. Fosun has invested in businesses ranging from French holiday operator Club Med to jeweller Folli Follie and knitwear band St. John in the United States.

If Mayhoola wins the bid for Lanvin, it will face the delicate task of recruiting the right chief executive and designer who can together craft a new creative vision for Lanvin. Industry observers estimate Lanvin will need least 100 million euros to buy back licences, expand operations, renovate shops and develop a proper leather goods line.

Lanvin would have to find around 20 million euros to buy back of its license from Japan’s Itochu trading group as it has come up for renewal on Dec.31 2017, several sources sad.
Mayhoola would also be interested in buying back Lanvin’s perfume licence which Mrs Wang sold to Interparfums in 2007 and which ends in 2025.

Swiss-German investor Ralph Bartel, which owns a 25 percent stake in Lanvin and has invested several dozens of millions of euros since 2010, has said he wished to remain on board to try to recoup his investment in the longer term, according to several sources close to the matter.

Mrs Wang’s refusal to significantly invest in Lanvin’s growth has prompted the departure of several highly regarded chief executives, with the last one being Thierry Andretta, who left in 2013 and now runs London’s Mulberry fashion company. Last year, Mrs Wang brought back as manager her friend Nicolas Druz, a journalist who created a newspaper for Chinese expatriates in Paris in the 1990s. In July, Mrs Wang parted ways with designer Bouchra Jarrar after just two seasons and appointed Olivier Lapidus, whose first collection presented last fall failed to impress buyers and the press.

The Qataris have been eyeing Lanvin for more than a decade. Back in 2008, when the company just started to return to profitability, they had made a bid that valued it at around 150 million euros. Today, Mayhoola, which has close ties to the Qatari royal family, is sitting on a potential profit of well in excess of 1.5 billion euros on its investment in Valentino.

The Italian fashion brand, whose sales have grown beyond the psychologically important 1 billion-euro-mark, is considering a flotation that would value it at more than 2.5 billion euros. Mayhoola bought Valentino in 2012 from private equity firm Permira for around 700 million euros.

fashionnetwork.com

i wonder if alber would be willing to come back if it gets sold to the qataris
 
He shouldn't, that ship has sailed. His next move should be to refresh elsewhere.

So it seems Lapidus will be out of a job soon? I doubt whoever will buy the major stake will keep him. I say go out with a bang if I was him...
 
Seriously, Lanvin needs a total reboot, menswear included.
The reality is that no one really cares about Lanvin anymore. They need someone who has a vision and who can totally transform the house.

Alber shouldn't comeback and i highly doubt that he would like to anyway.
No matter what, after bad sales, money loss and Olivier Lapidus it can only be better.
 
Its official now. Good news I guess...

Report: Fosun Outbids Mayhoola for Lanvin

PARIS, France — Chinese conglomerate Fosun International has won a bidding contest for Lanvin, the world’s oldest continuously running fashion house, beating Mayhoola For Investments, a fund backed by the Qatari royal family which also owns Valentino and Balmain, according to market reports. An official announcement is expected this week.

Fosun is said to be injecting more than €100 million into the near-bankrupt French heritage label, which has faced a downward spiral since the sudden departure of former artistic director Alber Elbaz in October 2015, following disagreements with Lanvin owner Shaw-Lan Wang. According to the reports, the Taiwanese businesswoman, who previously held 75 percent of the company will lose control, becoming a minority shareholder with a stake of 20 percent. Lanvin declined to comment.

The reports follow news that Fosun and Mayhoola were competing for Lanvin, a label with a powerful brand DNA that has suffered from a crippling combination of a weak designer, shaky management team and a demoralised group of employees.

Following the exit of Elbaz, sales dropped sharply. In 2016, Lanvin’s revenues plummeted 23 percent to €162 million and the company posted its first loss in more than a decade. Sources say the losses widened in 2017 and the label has faced a serious cash shortage. Lanvin said in early November that Wang would put more money into the business by the end of 2017, but the cash injection never materialised.

The deal is a blow for Mayhoola, which has been courting Lanvin since 2008 and aims to build a group of luxury fashion brands. Its portfolio currently includes Valentino Fashion Group, Balmain, Anya Hindmarch and menswear brand Pal Zileri.

Fosun, which is controlled by billionaire Guo Guangchang and owns French tourism group Club Med, also recently entered into acquisition talks with Italian lingerie brand La Perla. The news comes as Chinese interest in European fashion labels has been on the rise: On Friday, Shandong Ruyi agreed to buy a controlling stake in Swiss luxury brand Bally.
Source: https://www.businessoffashion.com/articles/news-bites/report-fosun-outbids-mayhoola-for-lanvin
 
Definitely wish it was the Mayohoola group instead, this one doesn't sound promising at all. We can only hope for the best at this point...
 
Now all they have to do is find a good designer. There is no way that they're going to waste their investment with Olivier Lapidus at the helm. Hopefully this investment won't turn out to be a double edged sword. I wouldn't be suprised if he get's the boot right after the Fall, get this, Presentation. :o
 
You know, what goes around comes around. Alber built what Lanvin represented in the 21st century and to sack him like that has its harsh consequences. Educated shoppers are clearly loyal and didn't want to participate in keeping Wang afloat, while less informed ones simply didn't care for the new direction (if it can be called that).

I am glad that Wang lost her majority stake and that someone else with a better business sense and hopefully less pride will be calling the shots. I wish Lanvin the best because back in its heyday, the brand was fire, and I want to see good design there again.
 
So La Perla is the only fashion brand on Fosun's books? I don't care enough about that brand to focus on how it's being run. But I'm skeptical, yet still happy. Doubt it's a coincidence that it's a Chinese company who won the bid. Madame Wang will have made sure of that.

Now they can start with proper house cleaning!
 

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