French luxury group LVMH has agreed to sell fashion brand Marc Jacobs to a joint venture between brand manager WHP Global and apparel company G-III Apparel Group, which are raising up to $850 million to fund the deal, the companies said on Thursday.

Marc Jacobs’ sale closes a nearly three-decade chapter for LVMH and reflects a broader push to focus on profitability in a challenging luxury market, where conflict in ‌the Middle East continues ⁠to disrupt ⁠travel and weighs on spending in a key region.

The transaction highlights a broader shift in the luxury sector, with conglomerates such as LVMH ​rationalizing non-core assets while specialist brand managers and manufacturers become natural buyers for “accessible luxury” and American designer names, supply chain consultant ​Brittain Ladd said.

“This underscores a new playbook of owning the IP, licensing aggressively and keeping operations lean,” Ladd, consultant at Florida-based Chang Robotics said.

LVMH said last month the Iran war shaved at least 1% off group sales ​in the latest quarter, with lower Gulf spending and fewer tourists in ⁠Europe adding ‌to the weakness.

Similar deals have moved well-known labels from large consumer companies to brand ​managers, including ​Adidas’ 2021 sale of Reebok to Authentic Brands Group for up to 2.1 billion euros.

Reuters ⁠reported last year that the Bernard Arnault-led company had been holding talks ​with potential buyers including WHP Global and Reebok-owner Authentic Brands Group for the sale ​of Marc Jacobs.

CREATIVE CONTINUITY

New York-based WHP Global said Marc Jacobs would become a core part of its premium fashion portfolio, which includes Vera Wang, rag & bone and G-STAR, taking its global retail sales above $9.5 billion.

Founder Marc Jacobs, who launched the label in 1984, will remain creative director after the deal closes, overseeing its creative direction and runway collections. LVMH acquired a majority stake in Jacobs’ brand in 1997, the same year it named him ‌Louis Vuitton’s first creative director.

At Louis Vuitton, Jacobs introduced ready-to-wear collections and artist collaborations, including with Richard Prince and Takashi Murakami, helping fuse fashion, art and pop culture.

“I am forever ​grateful to Bernard ​Arnault for his support, belief ⁠and trust in me over the last 30 years,” Jacobs said on Instagram.

DEAL ECONOMICS

Under the deal, WHP will form a 50/50 joint venture with G-III to own Marc Jacobs’ intellectual property.

The transaction is expected to be ​completed before year-end, the companies said in a joint statement.

G-III will acquire and manage the brand globally, while WHP will oversee licensing.

Financial terms for the deal were not disclosed. However, a regulatory filing showed G-III and WHP would each contribute up to $425 million to fund the acquisition.

G-III, which owns brands including Karl Lagerfeld and DKNY, said it would fund its investment with cash and its revolving credit facility.

  • Published On May 16, 2026 at 07:51 AM IST

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