Nasdaq-beating multiples threaten to cool Europe's luxury sizzle

Published Sun, May 30, 2021 · 09:50 PM

DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.

London

EUROPE'S purveyors of luxury are heading into risky territory.

Stellar earnings, M&A speculation and the promise of post-lockdown demand have sent shares of companies such as LVMH and Hermes International rocketing to all-time highs, giving them multiples far richer than the Nasdaq 100.

Their average price-to-earnings premium to Wall Street's tech-heavy benchmark hit a record of 29 per cent this month, and is prompting some investors to question how much more steam their rally has.

Yes, the sector still has a lot going for it. Consumers flush with cash after almost 18 months of on-again-off-again lockdowns may be ready to splurge on a Louis Vuitton bag or a Hermes scarf or a Chanel jacket.

Also, luxury's ability to command top dollar for its wares remains intact and affluent Chinese clients still hanker after coveted European brand names.

DECODING ASIA

Navigate Asia in
a new global order

Get the insights delivered to your inbox.

But that hasn't stopped investors from being concerned about the fat multiples.

"These companies are Amazon-proof, they know how to protect their brands," said Martyn Hole, equity investment director at Capital Group, which has an overweight position in luxury stocks. "The one thing we are worrying about is valuations."

The MSCI Europe Apparel and Luxury Goods Index has risen 20 per cent this year, outperforming the MSCI Europe's 12 per cent gain and giving it a PE ratio of 35 times estimated 2021 earnings. The surge has taken the sector's valuation premium relative to the broader market above 100 per cent, a historic high.

For Barclays strategists, that places luxury stocks in the very-expensive category, with little room for upside in the second half of the year.

UBS Group AG analyst Zuzanna Pusz said that while the earnings season that just ended was "great", people "ask themselves 'what's next?' "

The sector's frenzy is not confined to stocks. This month, Italian luxury fashion retailer Golden Goose drew enough interest to sell a 480 million-euro (S$774 million) six-year junk bond, with investors betting on its ability to sell high-end sneakers for around 400 euros.

Much attention is focused on the new drivers for luxury, like stimulus checks in the United States, the casual-wear that's proving popular even as workers return to offices and the 700 billion euros in excess savings Europeans are estimated to have squirrelled away because of the pandemic, waiting to be unleashed.

"We are in the days where the expensive gets even more expensive but for good reasons," said Michel Keusch, a portfolio manager at Bellevue Asset Management. "In a scenario of reopening economies, people want to treat themselves and buy things that will make them look good. We still see upside."

Still, the stimulus won't last forever, and as economies reopen people will have a wide range of spending options, from travel and restaurants to theatres and cinemas.

Luxury goods may not be the top beneficiaries. Two other elements that investors need to worry about are the overplaying of the M&A card and the political question mark over China demand, luxury's biggest growth engine.

"Luxury sector risks could be underestimated," according to Francesca DiPasquantonio, an analyst at Deutsche Bank.

Investors have plenty of other options. The analyst consensus sees little return for the MSCI Europe Luxury Goods Index over the next 12 months compared with a 19 per cent upside for stocks on the MSCI Europe Retail Index, particularly online retailers like Zalando. BLOOMBERG

Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services