Chanel plans to increase investment in its retail network and real estate by at least 50 per cent this year, as the French design house competes with other luxury groups in a hot market for prime locations. The company, which is owned by the billionaire Wertheimer family and headquartered in London, also plans to continue to make acquisitions to further integrate its supply chain after a dozen such deals last year, according to its top executives. “We are seizing opportunities in real estate which the current environment is offering.
So we will be on the offensive,” Chanel’s global chief financial officer Philippe Blondiaux told the Financial Times. “We are also expanding our capacity [and] we are accelerating the vertical integration of our supply chain because we believe this is key to controlling our manufacturing and materials.” Chanel will be competing in a crowded real estate market as top luxury groups spend billions to secure the most exclusive retail locations for their brands.
Gucci owner Kering last month bought a retail block on Milan’s top shopping street for €1.3 billion (US$1.41 billion) from Blackstone — Europe’s biggest property deal for two years — as demand from luxury groups helps high-end retail real estate defy a wider downturn.
LVMH, the world’s biggest luxury group by sales, spent roughly €2.5 billion on real estate investments last year, including for prize assets on Paris’ Champs Elysées. Chanel has also recently splashed .
