Hermes Sales Growth Strong As China Economy Regains Footing
By Reuters | 12 Feb, 2026
Hermes US sales jumped 12.1% while China rose 8.4% in 2025, suggesting the contagion from the property market meltdown has been contained.
Hermes, whose handbags sell for $10,000 and more, on Thursday reported stronger than expected fourth-quarter revenue growth, lifted by strong sales in the United States and Japan.
Thanks to its ultra-wealthy clients and large order backlog, the group has weathered a luxury sector slowdown better than most of its rivals, consistently increasing revenue while sales at other luxury groups, like LVMH and Kering, have been under pressure.
"The group is going into 2026 with confidence," said CEO Axel Dumas, adding that this year's price increases would be around 5-6%, down from a 6-7% rate in 2025, attributing the slower pace to currency shifts.
Hermes shares rose on the results, trading around 3% higher at 1515 GMT.
Chiara Battistini, luxury equity analyst at J.P. Morgan, said the price increases Hermes imposes on its customers are a key question for the company's growth outlook.
Many of its rivals have put the brakes on price rises due to falling sales. Gucci owner Kering's CEO earlier this week said a price hike "bonanza" post-pandemic had contributed to the company's revenue slide.
Sales of products, including Birkin and Kelly bags, silk scarves and perfume, grew by 9.8% in the fourth quarter in currency-adjusted terms, compared to an analyst consensus compiled by Visible Alpha of 8.4% growth.
Sales in the Americas region, mainly the United States, rose by 12.1%, beating expectations of around 9%, while sales in Asia excluding Japan - a region mainly driven by China - grew 8%.
VALUATION OUTLIER
With around 25,000 staff globally, family-controlled Hermes has become France's second-largest company by market capitalisation surpassed only by arch-rival LVMH, whose annual sales are more than four times bigger.
But trading at 45 times forward earnings according to LSEG data - almost twice the multiple of LVMH and Cartier-owner Richemont - Hermes' stock could come under pressure, some analysts say.
POSITIVE SIGNS IN CHINA
In a call with analysts, Dumas said he was seeing positive signs in China, a major luxury market that has slowed significantly in the past few years due to the impact of a property crash on the country's economy.
"I do not see the situation deteriorating," he said. "There are positive moves, in particular the way they [China] are managing the property crisis."
Revenues in Hermes' leather division, which accounts for most of its profits, grew by 14.6% organically.
Hermes' full-year operating profit came in at 6.57 billion euros ($7.79 billion), with a 41% profit margin, slightly ahead of estimates of a 40% margin. The company said it would pay a dividend of 18 euros per share.
(Reporting by Tassilo Hummel, editing by Helen Reid, Tomasz Janowski and Jane Merriman)
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