Arab Times

Dueling over diamonds: LVMH says Tiffany not worth buyout

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It’s an ugly spat for such a glamorous industry: French luxury powerhouse LVMH and U.S. jeweler Tiffany & Co. are blaming each other for the collapse of what would have been the sector’s biggest-ever buyout deal.

Paris-based LVMH had announced Wednesday it was abandoning the $14.5 billion takeover plan because the French government had requested a delay to assess the impact of proposed U.S. tariffs. Tiffany sued to enforce the deal, and on Thursday LVMH lashed back.

The Paris-based conglomera­te - whose holdings including Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Moet & Chandon, Bulgari and Sephora - issued a statement threatenin­g legal action of its own, accusing Tiffany of mismanagin­g the financial crisis prompted by virus lockdowns.

LVMH criticized Tiffany for issuing dividends even as it was losing money, and Tiffany’s performanc­e in the first half of this year was “significan­tly” worse than that of other LVMH brands during the period. “LVMH confirms that the conditions are not met” to close the deal, it said.

Even before Wednesday’s announceme­nt, the deal’s value had been eroded by wider industry troubles caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has caused retail sales to plunge around the world.

Tiffany, based in New York, said LVMH’s argument for halting the buyout has no basis in French law, and that LVMH hadn’t attempted to seek the required antitrust approval from three jurisdicti­ons. LVMH disputed that, and said the necessary approvals were expected in October. (AP)

 ??  ?? In this file photo, CEO of LVMH Bernard Arnault presents the group’s 2019 results during a press con
ference, in Paris. (AP)
In this file photo, CEO of LVMH Bernard Arnault presents the group’s 2019 results during a press con ference, in Paris. (AP)

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