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LVMH’s Moët Hennessy to Cut Workforce by 10%, FT Reports

The luxury conglomerate’s wine and spirits business will shrink its workforce by about 1,200 employees, according to the Financial Times.
LVMH Chairman and CEO Bernard Arnault currently intends to hold the stock only as an investment.
LVMH Chairman and CEO Bernard Arnault. (Getty Images)

LVMH group’s wine and spirits business Moët Hennessy will shrink its workforce by more than 10 percent, about 1,200 employees, the Financial Times reported on Thursday, citing an internal video message from the division’s CEO, Jean-Jacques Guiony.

Guiony and his deputy, Alexandre Arnault, son of LVMH owner Bernard Arnault, told staff at Moët Hennessy this week that they planned to cut the workforce back to 2019 levels, the newspaper said, adding that a timeline for the job cuts was not immediately known.

Organic sales at Moët Hennessy, LVMH’s weakest division, dropped 9 percent in the first quarter, hit by a slump in its key US and Chinese markets. This dragged other sectors of the luxury goods empire, which encompasses brands from Louis Vuitton to Moët & Chandon.

“While Moët-Hennessy’s business has returned to its 2019 level, Moët-Hennessy announced yesterday its intention to adjust its organisation and gradually return to its 2019 staffing levels, primarily by managing its natural turnover and not filling vacant positions,” LVMH said, according to the FT report.

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LVMH and Moët Hennessy did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

Alexandre Arnault, who has links with US President Donald Trump’s family, was assigned the job of helping turn around the group’s wine and spirits business in November 2024, a task that could be more difficult now, as 20 percent reciprocal tariffs imposed by Trump on all European Union goods could have an impact on the company.

Last month, the French wine and spirits exporters group said that the sales of French wine and spirits were expected to slide in the US following Trump’s tariff announcement.

By Kritika Singh; Edited by Alan Barona

Learn more:

LVMH Sales Miss Expectations

First-quarter fashion and leather goods sales fell 5 percent for the luxury giant, whose brands include Louis Vuitton and Dior.

Disclosure: LVMH is part of a group of investors who, together, hold a minority interest in The Business of Fashion. All investors have signed shareholders’ documentation guaranteeing BoF’s complete editorial independence.

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