Kering shares plunge 12% after Demna Gvasalia named as Gucci’s artistic director

Kering shares plunge 12% after Demna Gvasalia named as Gucci’s artistic director


A Gucci store, operated by Kering SA, in the Sanlitun area of Beijing, China, on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2024. 

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Shares of Kering plunged on Friday after the company announced that Demna Gvasalia would take the reins as new artistic director of its ailing Gucci fashion line.

Gvasalia, known as Demna in the industry, joins internally from Kering-owned Balenciaga. He replaces Sabato De Sarno, whose departure was announced last month.

Shares were down 12.4% by 9:21 a.m. London time. The slide marks the company’s biggest share price decline since October 2008, according to Reuters.

“Demna’s contribution to the industry, to Balenciaga, and to the Group’s success has been tremendous. His creative power is exactly what Gucci needs,” Kering’s chairman and CEO François-Henri Pinault said in a statement.

Demna, a Georgian national and Gucci’s first non-Italian artistic director since Tom Ford, served for almost a decade at Kering’s smaller label Balenciaga. He is known for bringing streetwear into the luxury sphere.

He courted controversy in 2022 following an ad campaign featuring children with bondage-style products. One ad involved a child holding a handbag in the form of a stuffed teddy bear in bondage-style straps, while another featured papers including text from a 2008 Supreme Court ruling relating to child pornography.

The appointment marks Kering’s latest bid to turn around its main Gucci label, which accounts for around half of total group revenues but has suffered waning sales amid weaker demand from the key Chinese market.

Gucci sales plunged 24% annually in the fourth quarter to 1.92 billion euros, Kering reported last month, amid a broader 12% fall in group revenues.

Kering confirmed that Demna’s appointment will take effect from July 2025.

Speculation had been mounting that Kering may seek an external appointment to revive Gucci’s fortunes after its years of maximalist style fell out of vogue amid an industry-wide shift toward “quiet luxury.”

Writing in a note Thursday, Jefferies analysts said that the company would now need to “move at pace” to reinvigorate the fashion appeal of Gucci.

“Still, given that Demna will take up his role in early July, it is unclear whether his imprint on the brand will already be evident at Gucci’s September Milan fashion show. Or whether we will have to wait until 2026,” they noted.



Source

Microsoft’s Brad Smith says U.S. tech should ‘worry a little’ about Chinese firms’ government subsidies
World

Microsoft’s Brad Smith says U.S. tech should ‘worry a little’ about Chinese firms’ government subsidies

Microsoft President Brad Smith speaks at a press conference at the Representation of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia about future visions for the development and application of artificial intelligence in education in NRW in Berlin on June 4, 2025. Soeren Stache | Picture Alliance | Getty Images American tech companies should “worry a little bit” […]

Read More
FDA agrees to review Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine application in a reversal
World

FDA agrees to review Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine application in a reversal

A researcher works in the lab at the Moderna headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts, March 26, 2024. Adam Glanzman | Bloomberg | Getty Images Moderna said on Wednesday the Food and Drug Administration has agreed to review its experimental mRNA flu shot, reversing the agency’s earlier decision to refuse to accept the application in a move […]

Read More
Oil jumps more than 2% after Vance says Iran ignored key U.S. demand, military strikes on the table
World

Oil jumps more than 2% after Vance says Iran ignored key U.S. demand, military strikes on the table

Oil prices rose more than 2% on Wednesday, after Vice President JD Vance said Iran did not address U.S. red lines in nuclear talks this week and President Donald Trump reserves the right to use military force. U.S. crude oil rose $1.56, or 2.5%, to $63.89 per barrel. Global benchmark Brent was up $1.61, or […]

Read More