Forty years of maison-by-maison compounding, on one filterable page.
Bernard Arnault entered the luxury industry in 1984 by acquiring the bankrupt Boussac Saint-Frères textile group — a deal whose true prize was a single crown jewel buried inside: Christian Dior. From that foothold Arnault engineered the 1987 merger that formed LVMH, took control of the group by 1990, and spent the next thirty-five years assembling roughly 75 maisons across Fashion & Leather Goods, Wines & Spirits, Perfumes & Cosmetics, Watches & Jewelry, Selective Retailing, and Other Activities. This page catalogs the record: whole-company acquisitions, controlling stakes, staged buyouts, and the internal consolidations that shape today's group perimeter. It is intentionally a living reference — as new deals close, the row is added, the roll-ups reflow, and the sitemap timestamp bumps. Nothing here is investment advice. Everything here is a fact-checkable practitioner reference for a very specific question — what does forty years of Arnault capital allocation actually look like in list form?
Nine columns. Year of announcement or close. Target maison. Division at time of the transaction (Wines & Spirits, Fashion & Leather Goods, Perfumes & Cosmetics, Watches & Jewelry, Selective Retailing, Other Activities, or Corporate for pre-division deals). Approximate consideration in USD or EUR (illustrative where deal size was undisclosed — marked "n/d" for not-disclosed or "approx"). Deal structure. Counterparty type. The family-maison flag — the defining Arnault acquisition pattern: was the target a heritage family maison acquired to preserve craft under LVMH's long-duration capital? Distinctive notes. Current status — held, divested, merged, or consolidated into a division.
Sort and filter. Click any column header to sort. Use the decade, division, structure, counterparty, and family-maison filters to isolate a slice. The search box matches target names and notes.
What counts as an acquisition. This record includes whole-company purchases, controlling-stake purchases, staged buyouts of family maisons, and the marquee hostile / activist positions (Gucci, Hermes) that shaped LVMH's history even where they later unwound. It also includes the group-forming 1987 Louis Vuitton / Moët Hennessy merger and the 2017 internal Christian Dior Couture consolidation, because both fundamentally reshaped the group perimeter. Small tuck-ins — single vineyards, boutique jewelry manufacturers, distribution deals — are represented but not exhaustive; the point of the page is the strategic record, not an audit of every notarial filing.
Family-maison marker. A YES flag means the target was a heritage family maison — a founder-family or founder-descendant business acquired to preserve craft, brand, and generational continuity under LVMH's permanent capital. A NO flag means the transaction was a public-company sale, a distressed rescue, an internal consolidation, a corporate divestiture, or a hostile / activist accumulation. Roughly two-thirds of LVMH's operating-company acquisitions carry the family-maison marker — the pattern is not incidental to LVMH's earnings power; it is LVMH's earnings power. It is the continental-European analog to Berkshire's friendly-founder pattern.
Every major LVMH acquisition since Bernard Arnault took control of Boussac Saint-Frères in 1984 — through the 1987 Louis Vuitton / Moët Hennessy merger, the 1990s assembly of Kenzo, Guerlain, Loewe, Céline, Marc Jacobs, Sephora, DFS, TAG Heuer, and Fendi, the 2000s expansion into Château d'Yquem, Glenmorangie, and Hublot, the iconic 2010s deals for Bulgari, Loro Piana, Rimowa, Belmond, and the historic 2017 Christian Dior Couture consolidation, to the $15.8B Tiffany & Co. acquisition that closed in January 2021 and the follow-on tuck-ins across every division since. Sortable by year, division, deal size, structure, and counterparty type — with the family-maison pattern flagged across four decades. Every row is a fact-checkable reference. This is a living dataset — updated whenever LVMH closes a new deal.
| Year | Target / Maison | Division | Consideration | Structure | Counterparty | Family Maison? | Notes | Status |
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Roll-ups reflect the acquisitions cataloged in the table above. Where consideration is undisclosed, the deal is included in count-based roll-ups but excluded from dollar-based totals. Dollar figures are illustrative aggregates — the point is directional, not audit-grade.
Whole-company, majority-stake, and distressed acquisitions only; hostile / minority accumulations excluded from the dollar totals to avoid mixing cost basis with market-value stakes. Figures are illustrative aggregates in USD-equivalent. Bar length is proportional within this table only.
Whole-company and majority-stake purchases dominate. Arnault prefers to take control — typically as a friendly family transaction, occasionally as a hostile approach that later either succeeds outright or unwinds.
Fashion & Leather Goods and Wines & Spirits dominate the deal count. Watches & Jewelry and Selective Retailing grew through the 1997–2001 assembly phase and again with Bulgari (2011) and Tiffany (2021).
The signature LVMH acquisition pattern. Roughly two-thirds of whole-company and majority transactions carry the family-maison flag — the seller was a founder-family or founder-descendant that chose LVMH because LVMH is where heritage maisons go to preserve craft under permanent capital.
An acquisition record is a lagging indicator. The leading indicator is the accumulation phase — the equity positions, minority stakes, and family-office holdings that may or may not graduate into a full LVMH consolidation. LVMH's history shows the pattern: Fendi 2000 as a 25.5% stake with Prada built into Fendi 2001 as full control, Rimowa 2016 at 80% expected to eventually go to 100%, and the internal Christian Dior Couture 2017 consolidation that ended a thirty-year corporate separation. When Arnault starts buying, it is worth watching where the position could go.
The canonical LVMH accumulation story: stealth 17%+ position built via equity swaps through 2010, disclosed October 2010, fined EUR 8M by the AMF in 2013 for late disclosure, ultimately distributed to LVMH and Christian Dior shareholders in 2014 under court settlement. The Puech / Freymond fiduciary case remains active. Open the flagship LVMH case →
Groupe Arnault and LVMH have quietly become one of the largest private landlords on the Via Montenapoleone luxury retail corridor. Not classified as maison acquisitions but architecturally central to the ballast thesis. Real-estate-at-market vs. book is the hidden asset framing.
Watches & Jewelry has been the slowest-growing division relative to the Swatch and Richemont peers. Watch industry observers have long speculated on further tuck-ins in the independent Swiss maison universe. Nothing publicly disclosed as of publication.
Cheval Blanc, Bulgari Hotels, and the 2019 Belmond acquisition are being coordinated into a coherent LVMH hospitality vertical. The 2024 minority position in Groupe Barrière extends the perimeter. Whether hospitality graduates into a full seventh division remains an open question.
Every acquisition on this page is a candidate for a full practitioner case memo. These are the memos that already exist — and where they connect to the acquisitions catalogued above.
Educational reference. Not investment advice. Not a solicitation. Not affiliated with or endorsed by LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE, Christian Dior SE, Financière Agache, Groupe Arnault, Bernard Arnault, or any member of the Arnault family. The Baratelli Institute publishes under the Lowe v. SEC publisher exception; neutral positioning maintained throughout. Deal figures cited in this catalog are sourced primarily to LVMH annual reports and Universal Registration Documents, Christian Dior SE filings, AMF disclosures, contemporaneous press coverage (Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, Le Monde, Reuters, Bloomberg, The New York Times, Women's Wear Daily), and standard reference works on LVMH's history. Dollar and euro amounts are approximate. Where a specific transaction date or figure is not publicly disclosed, the row is flagged with "approx" or "n/d" (not disclosed) rather than fabricating precision. Ownership percentages for older or private-family deals are indicative; corrections welcome via the link in the footer.
“Money is only a means. What I care about is the long-term development of the maisons that we own.”