The Great Luxury Garage Sale: An Industry Clears Its Shelves
Why the great conglomerates are clearing out their basements — and what it means for the architecture of the industry.
In the spring of 2026, Bernard Arnault sent the message about Marc Jacobs. Twenty-nine years after LVMH had made the already-famous American the creative director of Louis Vuitton and simultaneously begun building his eponymous label, Marc Jacobs was sold to WHP Global and G-III Apparel for something just north of a billion dollars. It was the first genuinely large divestiture in the history of a conglomerate that had, across nearly four decades, bought almost everything and given back almost nothing.
Anyone reading this as an isolated event understands very little of what is happening right now. Anyone reading it as a signal understands nearly everything. What follows is The Silent Luxury’s mapping of the unprecedented wave of luxury brand acquisitions and divestitures reshaping the global industry in 2025 and 2026 — every major deal at conglomerate level and below, the structural forces behind each one, and what the reconfiguration means for the independent brands that were never part of a portfolio to begin with.
Kering sold its entire beauty division to L’Oréal for four billion euros. Estée Lauder attempted a merger with the Spanish house Puig, failed, and is now offering three of its brands for sale. LVMH is openly considering parting with Make Up For Ever, Fresh, and its Fenty Beauty stake. Richemont handed over YNAP. Prada swallowed Versace. And that is only the surface. But is this also the end of a business model?
Infographic © The Silent Luxury / Silent Communications GmbH, Vienna, 2026. All rights reserved. Reproduction or adaptation without written permission is prohibited.
The New Framework: What has structurally changed
The model that is now breaking apart was built in the nineties. Its logic was straightforward: consolidate brands, scale distribution, pool procurement, control global retail space. LVMH invented it, Kering copied it, everyone else followed. It worked because three things were true simultaneously: the Chinese market was growing, prices were rising, and the global middle class wanted to participate.
All three assumptions stopped being true at the same time.
China alone tells the most brutal story. After a decade in which Chinese buyers accounted for nearly a third of all global luxury purchases, the market contracted by 24 per cent in 2024, returning to 2020 levels. This is not a cyclical dip. It is a renegotiation: the property market has collapsed, savings behaviour has shifted, and a generation that identified itself with the promise of Chinese prosperity is beginning to understand that this promise has moved. The Chinese luxury consumer continues to buy, but buys differently — more selectively, more locally, with greater scepticism towards the Western prestige model.
Then came the price inflation. The conglomerates raised prices dramatically between 2020 and 2024, sometimes by as much as 60 per cent within three years. The theory was positional: the more expensive, the more exclusive, the more desirable. The reality was different. The middle-income customers who stopped buying have not come back. And the genuinely wealthy buyers who continue to purchase need no communication directed at them. They buy quietly. They buy what they know. Brands that spent the last three years amplifying their voices to justify their new price points in the process lost the only customers they could not afford to lose.
“Fashion’s old playbook no longer applies. Tariffs, technology and new consumer priorities are forcing a fundamental reset.” — Imran Amed, Business of Fashion / McKinsey State of Fashion 2026
To the China crisis came the tariffs. US trade policy has fundamentally reordered global supply chains. Luxury brands that concentrated production in Italy and France and concentrated their buyers in America and China are facing a cost problem that marketing cannot solve. And running quietly in the background is a third pressure: the rise of the influencer brand, the social-commerce label, the TikTok-native brand that built comparable awareness with a tenth of the marketing budget. Too Faced, Smashbox and brands like them felt this most directly. They were considered culturally relevant in the early 2010s, riding the beauty-blogger wave, and have since been overtaken by a market that moves faster than their product cycles.
The result of these three simultaneous pressures is a moment the industry last experienced after the 2008 financial crisis — except that this time it is more structural. The era of collecting is over. The era of choosing has begun.
The Five Structural Shifts
that triggered the sell-off cycle
Conglomerates like Estée Lauder had built China into their growth model twice: direct China revenue and duty-free revenue from Chinese travellers worldwide. When both collapsed simultaneously, the resulting gap was too large for any other region to fill quickly. Dr. Jart+, acquired with expectations of USD 500 million in annual revenue, is now producing around USD 150 million. That number is the balance sheet of that bet.
Luxury conglomerates used price increases as a growth strategy, not as a quality signal. The market accepts this in ultra-luxury — Hermès, Cartier, and Loro Piana deliver what their prices promise. In the elevated middle segment, which constitutes the actual breadth of most conglomerate portfolios, the formula has produced buyer abstinence. The customers who stepped away are not returning.
The classic conglomerate model was built around the department store: branded counters with well-positioned beauty advisors producing conversion rates. Estée Lauder is cutting precisely these positions — up to 10,000 roles, concentrated in point-of-sale staff. The channel is dying, and brands that did not pivot fast enough are dying with it.
Rhode by Hailey Bieber reached USD 212 million in revenue in three years, entirely direct-to-consumer, without a single department store shelf, with ten products. That is the model that Too Faced and Smashbox can no longer replicate — because it requires a form of authenticity that a conglomerate-owned brand cannot structurally produce.
US trade policy in 2025 and 2026 has fundamentally altered planning certainty for globally producing and globally selling luxury brands. Brands with distributed production and concentrated revenue in tariff-affected markets carry a structural risk that manifests in portfolio valuations and makes acquisitions and divestments significantly harder to price.
Infographic © The Silent Luxury / Silent Communications GmbH, Vienna, 2026. All rights reserved. Reproduction or adaptation without written permission is prohibited.
The Deals at Conglomerate Level
What has been bought, what has been sold, what remains in motion
The following overview begins with completed transactions and ends with those still in movement. It is not a complete picture — in a phase like this, news arrives faster than editorial deadlines. It is, however, an honest picture of what is actually changing.
Infographic © The Silent Luxury / Silent Communications GmbH, Vienna, 2026. All rights reserved. Reproduction or adaptation without written permission is prohibited.
The Layer Beneath: Premium & Niche
What is happening on the sub-luxury level
Anyone watching only the conglomerate deals sees half the picture. Below, at the level of premium and niche brands, an equally intensive consolidation has been running since 2024 — driven by different actors but the same structural forces. Private equity that has long invested in beauty is partially withdrawing. Strategic buyers are becoming more selective. And the brands doing the most interesting buying are approaching it very differently from 2021.
Infographic © The Silent Luxury / Silent Communications GmbH, Vienna, 2026. All rights reserved. Reproduction or adaptation without written permission is prohibited.
What It Means: The New Cartography
Who wins, who loses, and why this is a historic moment for independent brands
When you read all these transactions together, a map of the industry emerges that is clearer than any strategic communiqué issued in recent years. Three categories are consolidating as genuine anchor points: ultra-premium fragrance, high jewellery, and ultra-luxury leather goods. Everything else is in flux.
Fragrance is the only beauty format genuinely growing right now, and with a logic that plays directly into the behaviour of the post-materialist consumer: it is invisible, it is personal, it carries no logo. You buy it for yourself. Growth rates in niche fragrance are anomalous in an otherwise difficult market — Parfums de Marly nearly triples its valuation in three years, Creed is immediately identifiable as the crown jewel in the L’Oréal transaction despite Kering’s high-price acquisition. L Catterton invests in Ex Nihilo, Interparfums buys Goutal. Capital follows the nose.
Jewellery and ultra-luxury leather goods follow a different logic: value preservation. Cartier, Van Cleef, and Hermès will always be sought after, because their customers do not depend on advertising, influencers, or trend cycles. They buy because they know what they are buying. Richemont now holds exactly the right portfolio for this — concentrated, deep, without the distraction of YNAP.
What is disappearing is the middle. The conglomerate brand that is neither ultra-luxury nor niche, that sits on a department store shelf beside fifteen other products using the same marketing logic as everyone else, has no natural home in this market. Too Faced, Smashbox, Make Up For Ever, Fresh — these are not bad brands. They are structurally displaced in a market that rewards extremes and dissolves middle positions.
The conglomerates are tidying up. They are too busy tidying up to build new cult brands. This is the longest window that independent brands have had in decades.
For private equity, the picture is more mixed. Eurazeo and Carlyle are retreating from beauty because valuations have become more volatile and the exit market is less legible. Those who remain are more concentrated: Advent with its fragrance platform strategy, L Catterton with its focus on authentic niche positionings, Bansk with its eye on skincare newcomers like Byoma. The era of broadly diversified PE beauty funds buying anything that looked like growth is over.
And then there is a category that appears in none of these transactions, because it was never built for sale: the genuinely independent brand. These brands are often forgotten in analysis because they produce no deals. But they are, right now, the actual proof that the opposite of the conglomerate model is possible and profitable. In a moment when the conglomerates are occupied with restructuring, independent brands with clear identities have the longest window for customer acquisition they have had in decades.
In the autumn of 1997, a journalist wrote about the LVMH deal with Marc Jacobs: this was the future of the industry. Conglomerates buying talent, building infrastructure, globalising brands. He was right for nearly three decades.
The brand that LVMH built with Marc Jacobs has now been sold for a billion dollars to a licensing company that will move it from the niche of the fashion house into the global wholesale business. That is neither good nor bad. It is simply proof that no model holds forever.
What remains stable, across all these transactions, is something that appears on no balance sheet: the relationship between a brand and the person who identifies with it. Hermès never forgot this. Brunello Cucinelli never forgot it. And a new generation of brands — small, independent, listed in no conglomerate portfolio — is building on exactly this foundation right now.
The garage sale is still running. But the most interesting stall is not at the market.
Further Reading
- New Geographies: India and the Next Luxury Power Shift — Where the next generation of luxury consumers is emerging, and why the new geographies of demand are already matching China in scale.
- The LUMA Principle: How Material Decisions Become Brand Identity — Marion Röttges of Remei on design as material choice, and what that means for brands in a market saturated with claims and short on proof.
- TSL Economy: All Market Analysis and Industry Intelligence — The full archive of The Silent Luxury’s economic analysis, from luxury market shifts to brand strategy and the structural forces reshaping the industry.
The Luxury Garage Sale: Questions on the 2025–2026 M&A Wave
The wave of luxury and beauty brand sales in 2025 and 2026 has raised fundamental questions about the future of the conglomerate model. Below, The Silent Luxury addresses the most-searched questions about the deals, the structural causes, and the opportunity this moment creates — for buyers, for sellers, and for independent brands that were never part of a portfolio to begin with.
LVMH’s sale of Marc Jacobs — and its reported consideration of further sales including Make Up For Ever, Fresh, and its 50 per cent stake in Fenty Beauty — reflects a strategic concentration on its most margin-productive and culturally dominant assets. Bernard Arnault has built LVMH on the principle that every brand in the portfolio must justify its position through profitability and prestige. Marc Jacobs, despite nearly three decades of investment, never generated the margins that LVMH’s core houses do. The conglomerate is not in retreat — it is sharpening its focus on Louis Vuitton, Dior, Loro Piana and Bulgari, where pricing power and client loyalty are structurally irreplaceable.
The merger discussions between Estée Lauder and Puig, which would have created a combined beauty group valued at approximately USD 40 billion, collapsed on 21 May 2026 after months of talks. The most significant obstacle was valuation. Estée Lauder is simultaneously running a major restructuring — cutting up to 10,000 positions, selling three brands (Too Faced, Smashbox, Dr. Jart+), and paying a USD 210 million shareholder litigation settlement. This combination of pending liabilities and structural uncertainty made it near-impossible to agree on a share price for a transaction structured primarily as a stock swap. Puig, which went public in 2024 and has its own shareholders to protect, ultimately preferred to remain independent.
Estée Lauder has confirmed it is actively selling Too Faced, Smashbox, and Dr. Jart+. Final bids for all three brands have been received, with Too Faced and Smashbox marketed together and Dr. Jart+ offered separately. The sales are part of CEO Stéphane de La Faverie’s “Beauty Reimagined” strategy, which refocuses the group on its prestige core: MAC, Clinique, Tom Ford Beauty, Le Labo, and La Mer. The divestments reflect a broader recognition that these brands — built on the beauty-blogger aesthetic of the early 2010s — have been structurally overtaken by TikTok-native competitors and a direct-to-consumer model they were never designed for.
The acquisition of Kering Beauté by L’Oréal for €4 billion — completed in March 2026 — is the largest deal in L’Oréal’s history and the clearest signal of where luxury beauty is heading. The package includes the fragrance house Creed, and exclusive licences for Bottega Veneta and Balenciaga fragrances, with the Gucci licence to follow in 2028. L’Oréal secures dominance in premium fragrance — the only beauty category that has maintained strong growth through the luxury slowdown. For Kering, the sale was a financial necessity: the group ended 2024 with €10.5 billion in debt, partly incurred through the expensive Creed acquisition just one year earlier.
The luxury industry is not in decline. It is in structural bifurcation. The categories performing strongest in 2026 are ultra-premium fragrance, high jewellery, and ultra-luxury leather goods. What is contracting is the broad middle: conglomerate-owned brands that positioned themselves between mass and true luxury, and relied on department store distribution, aspirational pricing, and influencer-adjacent marketing. China’s luxury market contracted 24 per cent in 2024, returning to 2020 levels, and has not fully recovered. Brands with genuine craftsmanship credentials, clear identity, and pricing discipline — Hermès, Brunello Cucinelli, Cartier — are outperforming. The brands being sold right now are, with few exceptions, the ones that lost their positioning clarity over the past decade.
The current sell-off cycle creates an unusual strategic window for independent luxury brands. The great conglomerates are occupied with restructuring their portfolios — selling underperforming assets, renegotiating licences, and reducing headcount. This internal focus means they are not actively building new brand relationships or seeking new creative partnerships. For independent brands with clear positioning, strong founder identity, and a loyal customer base, this is the longest period of reduced conglomerate competition for customer attention in decades. The buyers with the most active acquisition appetite right now are not the traditional conglomerates but specialist private equity platforms, niche beauty strategics, and selective acquirers like L’Oréal — all of whom are paying premiums for authenticity, directness, and cultural credibility.
Similar Articles
THE DEFIANT VALUE: Inside the Bifurcation of the US Luxury Market
The Hourglass Snaps Shut: What the US Luxury Market Reveals in 2026
At the Apex and Below It: A Structural Diagnosis of the US Luxury Market