French luxury group Hermès will raise its U.S. prices from the start of May in order to offset the impact of President Donald Trumpâ€
The company — which earlier this week overtook rival LVMH as the worldâ€
“The price increase that weâ€
Hermès said prices will rise from May 1 and aim to “fully offsetâ€� the impact of the universal 10% tariff imposed by the White House in early April, rather than the 20% duties the European Union may face unless it can negotiate a new deal during Trumpâ€
U.S. consumers are expected to contend with higher prices on a host of items, ranging from electronics and clothes to cars and houses, as the impact of tariffs bites.
In its first-quarter results, Hermès reported 11% sales growth in the Americas, which accounted for nearly 17% of its sales revenue in the first three months of the year.
First-quarter revenue growth came in at 7% on a constant currency basis overall, just shy of consensus expectations of an 8% to 9% increase, Deutsche Bank analysts said in a note. It also represented a slowdown from 17.6% growth in the fourth quarter of 2024.
The Deutsche Bank analysts said that the results were nonetheless “robust,� with weakness driven by watches and perfume sales, while Citi described them as “a respectable outcome.�
Hermès shares dipped 1.3% in Thursday morning deals, taking its value to 244.5 billion euros ($278.2 billion) — just shy of LVMHâ€
LVMH, controlled by Franceâ€
LVMH on Tuesday reported an unexpected decline in first quarter sales, flagging a fall in its dominant fashion and leather goods division.
Analysts have predicted the luxury sector will be less impacted by tariffs than other retailers due to their ability to pass on increased import costs to a high-spending clientele. However, they would encounter major headwinds from a broad pullback in consumer spending as a result of weaker global economic growth or recessionary fears.