This picture taken on December 20, 2017 shows the logo of the French fashion main house and luxury goods Hermes outside a shop in the fashionable and luxurious street "rue du faubourg Saint-Honore" in Paris. Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP
Hermes’s sales and profit jumped as the maker of Birkin bags stood out from its luxury-industry rivals with unabated demand for its high-end purses, notably in the US and China.
First-half earnings and second-quarter sales growth beat analysts’ estimates. Revenue in the Americas in the second quarter grew 21% at constant exchange rates, almost double what analysts expected. The stock rose as much as 4.3% in Paris.
Hermes is outperforming its rivals like LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE and Cartier owner Richemont, which have reported weaker demand in the US after strong spending on luxury goods in the past two years.
Demand trends for early July haven’t changed in any region, Executive Chairman Axel Dumas told reporters in a call Friday.
"In difficult moments, there’s what we call in finance the flight to quality, so we’ve benefited from it,” Dumas said, adding "I don’t want to jinx it.”
Recurring operating profit advanced 28% to €2.95 billion ($3.24 billion) in the first half, and the margin reached 44%.
Analysts consider Hermes to be in a category of its own as far as pricing power is concerned as demand for its handbags consistently surpasses its capacity to produce them. That means many bags enjoy higher resale values.
"Hermes blows the whole luxury goods industry out of the water,” wrote Luca Solca, an analyst at Bernstein. "Hermes stands head and shoulders above anyone else.”
LVMH’s US revenue fell 1% in the second quarter on an organic basis.
Dumas said Hermes has no plans to further boost product prices this year after January’s hike.
The Kelly bag maker aims to open one new leather manufacturing facility per year in France in order to maintain a growth rate of about 7% for its leather goods.
Shares in Hermes have outperformed its luxury rivals, jumping by around a third this year. The company saw its market capitalization cross the symbolic €200 billion threshold earlier this year.
Sales from the region that includes China also grew by a more than a third.