Bernard Arnault, Chief Executive Officer of LVMH. Source: Reuters/Benoit Tessier
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • French fashion tycoon and CEO of French luxury group LVMH Bernard Arnault became the world’s richest man on yesterday, according to business news and information publisher Forbes
  • The number one spot on the Forbes rich list has been occupied by U.S. citizens Bezos, Tesla’s Elon Musk, Microsoft’s Bill Gates and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Warren Buffett for the best part of two decades
  • However Arnault, who oversees a global empire of 70 brands including luxury names Louis Vuitton and Sephora, is worth $186.3 billion, making him $300 million richer than Amazon founder Jeff Bezos who is worth $186 billion
  • According to Forbes, Arnault’s fortune has jumped from $76 billion in March 2020 to $186.3 billion on Monday, a massive rise of over $110 billion in the past 14 months, thanks to a pandemic defying performance by his luxury group LVMH (Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy)

French fashion tycoon and CEO of French luxury group LVMH Bernard Arnault became the world’s richest man on yesterday, according to business news and information publisher Forbes.

The number one spot on the Forbes rich list has been occupied by U.S. citizens Bezos, Tesla’s Elon Musk, Microsoft’s Bill Gates and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Warren Buffett for the best part of two decades.

However Arnault, who oversees a global empire of 70 brands including luxury names Louis Vuitton and Sephora, is worth $186.3 billion, making him $300 million richer than Amazon founder Jeff Bezos who is worth $186 billion.

According to Forbes, “Arnault’s fortune has jumped from $76 billion in March 2020 to $186.3 billion on Monday, a massive rise of over $110 billion in the past 14 months, thanks to a pandemic defying performance by his luxury group LVMH (Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy)”.

LVMH closed a $15.8 billion acquisition of U.S. jeweller Tiffany in the middle of the pandemic.

Surging sales at Louis Vuitton and Dior powered a strong rebound at LVMH in the first part of 2021, as thriving demand in Asia and the U.S. offset the drag from new coronavirus lockdowns in much of Europe.

Overall revenues at the conglomerate, owner of brands ranging from Moet & Chandon champagne to Guerlain cosmetics, returned to growth in the first quarter at a much faster pace than expected by analysts.

Restrictions to fight the COVID-19 pandemic hit major markets such as China hard a year ago, but luxury customers have begun buying more online, and across much of Asia, stores have been open since last spring, driving a sharp recovery.

Arnault got his break by putting up $15 million from his father’s construction business to buy Christian Dior in 1985.

Today, four of Arnault’s five children, Frederic, Delphine, Antoine and Alexandre, help their father run the global empire.

More From The Market Online

Well below US$5K/oz, gold’s surefire status as a safe haven has shifted

In the post-COVID-19 world, it’s almost definitely news to nobody reading this that gold prices have staged a fairly historic run.
The Market Online Video

From the Wire: Why did the RBA cut last year just to walk it all back 12 months later?

The Reserve Bank of Australia made the call to hike interest rates again in CY26, using its second board meeting to bring them
ASX concept

ASX 200 reacts to an RBA 25bps rate hike by… closing somewhat firmly in the green?

Colour me surprised – the ASX200 successfully priced something in for once, with today’s RBA rate hike not scaring the market down into
India Russia flag

Not just AUKUS indexes: USA’s war on Iran visible on India’s NIFTY; Russia’s MOEX

While the Australian market is busy watching Wall Street, gold, and oil prices – and the prices of relevant stocks exposed to those