LVMH puts mark on Olympics as luxury brands embrace sports
The 2024 Paris Olympic Games medals are displayed inside a custom-designed trunk manufactured by Louis Vuitton, an LVMH brand partner of the Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games, during a gathering at LVMH in Paris on July 22, 2024, ahead of the start of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.
Stephane De Sakutin | AFP | Getty Images
Whether it’s the Moët champagne poured to celebrate a win or the custom trunks that Louis Vuitton has made for medal ceremonies, luxury has been on full display at the 2024 Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games.
To Carly Duguid, the creative director for tennis and fashion star Naomi Osaka, luxury fashion and athletics are the perfect combination.
“There’s a strong parallel between athletes and brands in their commitment to quality and excellence,” Duguid told CNBC.
In the influencer age, fashion has quickly embraced the sports world and elevated athletes as fashion tastemakers. These global stars help connect brands to a whole new market of fans and potential new buyers.
Osaka was the first athlete to partner with Louis Vuitton, whose roster now includes Victor Wembanyama, Carlos Alcaraz, and many French Olympians and Paralympians.
LVMH is not alone. Gucci has an ambassadorship with British soccer player Jack Grealish and put billboards across cities featuring Italian tennis champion Jannik Skinner. At the 2024 WNBA draft, Caitlin Clark was the first professional basketball player ever dressed by Prada, and continues to don classic designer wear all season. Dozens of luxury designers outfitted national teams for the first time for the opening ceremony, marking not only new ties between athletics and fashion, but athletics and the Olympic Games.
LVMH has looked to make a big splash beyond just athlete partnerships, becoming the first luxury brand to be an Olympic sponsor.
The roughly $160 million investment, which represents nearly 1% of LVMH’s 2023 profits as the parent company of brands like Celine, Louis Vuitton, Loewe, Sephora, and Dom Perignon, has provided luxury touchpoints to the Games, from the Chaumet-designed medals to French athletes wearing Berluti-designed outfits at the opening ceremony and medal bearers wearing vintage-style, distinctly French LVMH uniforms.
LVMH financials, luxury buying, and Olympic growth
Connecting to the world’s most elite sporting events may give LVMH a boost as overall luxury spending slows.
LVMH missed its second-quarter sales and revenue goals, and the luxury sector is more broadly faltering with decreasing global demand, largely due to increased financial instability and a shrinking market of “aspirational” consumers – young, first-time luxury buyers.
Milton Pedraza, CEO of luxury industry consultancy The Luxury Institute, said that new potential buyers, rather than buying a “no-name belt,” will see athletes at the Olympics surrounded by LVMH branding and aspire for those luxury items.
Luxury brands once concerned themselves primarily with the most expensive…
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