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LVMH takes majority stake in Virgil Abloh streetwear label Off-White
Published: Jul 22, 2021 06:43 PM
Consumers at a Hermes flagship store in Shanghai on Wednesday. The French luxury brand has seen increasing traffic in recent days as Chinese consumers release their pent-up consumption demand as the coronavirus ebbs. In the first half of 2020, global sales of Hermes dwindled 24 percent year-on-year to 2.488 billion euros ($2.96 billion). Photo: CNSphoto

Consumers at a Hermes flagship store in Shanghai on Wednesday. The French luxury brand has seen increasing traffic in recent days as Chinese consumers release their pent-up consumption demand as the coronavirus ebbs. In the first half of 2020, global sales of Hermes dwindled 24 percent year-on-year to 2.488 billion euros ($2.96 billion). Photo: CNSphoto



French luxury conglomerate LVMH said Tuesday it intends to take a majority stake in the luxury streetwear label Off-White created by Virgil Abloh, the first black American creative director of a top French fashion house.

LVMH will take a 60 percent stake in Off-White for an undisclosed sum, according to a statement.

Abloh will retain 40 percent and remain creative director for the men's collections of LVMH's Louis Vuitton fashion house. The Italian group New Guards, which currently owns a majority of Off-White, will remain a partner to the brand via a licencing agreement after the deal, which is subject to regulatory approvals, is finalized.

The deal marks an expansion of Abloh's collaboration with LVMH, the world's top luxury group, and he said he envisaged potential partnerships with its non-fashion brands as well as starting new ones of his own.

"For nearly a decade, we've been building Off-White to be a brand designed to empower our generation and challenge the status quo," Abloh said in a statement. "LVMH brings to the table the additional firepower and scale to accelerate our momentum and evolve Off-White into a truly multi-line luxury brand," he added.

Abloh has addressed both environmental and social issues in his work with Louis Vuitton, with anti-racist and anti-homophobia messages at his January show in Paris.

He said he plans to use his partnership with LVMH "to expand opportunities for diverse individuals and foster greater equity and inclusion in the industries we serve."