| Ticker | Direction | Speaker | Thesis | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AVOID |
Deborah Aitken
Senior Analyst, Bloomberg Intelligence |
"Why it [Hermès] stands out versus its peers, its premium valuation is because that helps it absolutely to not only manage margin but to grow margins." The analyst explicitly differentiates Hermès from "its peers," citing its unique vertical integration and pricing power as reasons for its premium. By inference, peers (like LVMH) who are less vertically integrated or have less pricing power on "aspirational" luxury goods are more vulnerable to the "global tariff environment" and margin compression. AVOID. Prefer Hermès (RMS) over broad luxury peers (LVMH) as a quality flight. A broad recovery in Chinese consumer demand could lift the entire sector, causing LVMH (which has higher beta) to outperform defensive plays like Hermès. | — | |
| LONG |
Deborah Aitken
Senior Analyst, Bloomberg Intelligence |
"Gross margin up over 100 pips beating consensus nicely... We saw growth 1q 7 percent, four Q 10%. So some momentum building." Hermès is demonstrating "Veblen good" characteristics where demand accelerates despite price hikes. The company is successfully passing on costs (5-6% pricing power) and expanding margins despite macro headwinds (tariffs/taxes) that are hurting the broader sector. Vertical integration (hiring 250 artisans/year) insulates them from supply chain shocks. LONG. The acceleration in revenue combined with margin expansion suggests Hermès is decoupling from the general luxury slowdown. Escalation of global trade tariffs beyond current pricing power absorption; slowdown in the ultra-high-net-worth consumer segment. | 0:00 |