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Company

LVMH

Position

Chair

Index

Power List

Location

Paris

Advice type

Luxury asset transactions

Asset Class

Luxury

Client type

High-profile clients

UHNW

Sector Focus

Luxury Goods

Bernard Arnault

Spear’s Review                                                                                                    

Bernard Arnault is responsible for transforming the luxury goods industry from one based on small, family-run artisanal maisons into one dominated by multi-billion-pound global dream factories. 

Consistently towards the top of ‘world’s wealthiest’ lists, he is worth $155 billion, according to Forbes as of September 2025. 

More than any other, Arnault has shaped notions of modern wealth and sophistication. LVMH, the luxury goods conglomerate he built over four decades and runs with his family, is the largest in the world, encompassing 75 brands. They include Louis Vuitton, Dior, Tiffany, Fendi, Givenchy, Loewe, Loro Piana, Acqua di Parma, TAG Heuer and Bulgari, plus Moët & Chandon and Dom Pérignon.

Before Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld or John Galliano, Arnault understood that a status symbol is as much about what it represents as what it actually is. He set out to create products that, as he once told Harvard Business Review, ‘fulfil a fantasy. You feel you must buy it or you won’t be in the moment. You’ll be left behind.’

To bolster his vision, he created the flagship store-as-brand-temple, and pioneered the idea of installing buzzy young designers to give established labels modern cultural currency. He hired Marc Jacobs and Virgil Abloh at Louis Vuitton and masterminded Louis Vuitton’s collaboration with artists such as Takashi Murakami and cult streetwear brands, notably Supreme.  He also moved Jonathan Anderson, the mastermind behind Loewe’s recent success, to Dior, the conglomerate’s crown jewel.

Arnault says he figured out his strategy in New York in the Eighties when he got into a cab and discovered that his driver had never heard of de Gaulle but he knew Dior. His aggressive methods, taking over almost any brand he set his eyes on – except, much to his frustration, Gucci and Hermès – have earned him the nickname ‘the wolf in cashmere clothing’.

Arnault, 76, shows no signs of slowing down. LVMH recently acquired the French financial paper Challenges and the daily liberal newspaper L’Opinion. As billionaires such as Jeff Bezos are buying up as much of the media as they can, Arnault refuses to be left behind.

Read next: The 2025 Spear’s Power List – who made the cut

Rank: Top 100

Top 100 2025, Power List

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