Hermes International: Protecting its Family Business from LVMH’s Hostile Takeover
EXCERPTS
CORE VALUES AND CULTURE
LVMH’S HOSTILE TAKEOVER ATTEMPT?
While the Hermes family planned to carry on with its rich family heritage and keep its business independent, LVMH was secretly acquiring stake in Hermes. On October 23, 2010, Patrick Thomas was interrupted by a phone call when he was on a bike ride in Auvergne, a mountainous region in central France. ...
PRESERVING ITS CORE VALUES AND CULTURE AND KEEPING THE FAMILY-MANAGED BUSINESS INDEPENDENT
Fearing a hostile takeover by LVMH and to protect Hermes’s family legacy, in December 2010, Thomas in association with 52 key shareholders of the Hermes family, decided to set up a holding company called H51 wherein 50.2 percent of the shares were pooled by Hermes family members...
LAWSUITS FOLLOW
Though the Hermes family showed reluctance to sell its family-managed business and a desire to keep its business independent, by December 2011, LVMH had increased its stake in Hermes to 22.3 percent. This prompted Hermes on July 10, 2012, to file a complaint against LVMH with the French prosecutors...
AMF IMPOSES A FINE ON LVMH
In June 2013, the AMF, after a series of investigations, ruled that LVMH be fined €10 million over its stake in Hermes (Refer to Exhibit III for investigations made by the AMF). The penalty was imposed on LVMH for breaching disclosure rules during its stake building in Hermes. ...
BRINGING IN A FAMILY MEMBER AS SUCCESSOR
After Thomas retired in February 2014, Axel was brought in as the CEO of Hermes. Bringing in a family member was a bid to cement the Hermes family’s grip on the company and show outsiders that the family planned to keep its business independent...
EXHIBITS
Exhibit I:The Genealogical Tree of the Hermes Family
Exhibit II:Financials of Hermes International (in millions of Euros)
Exhibit III:Investigations Made by the AMF