LVMH says the threat of US tariffs on French products has forced it to scrap its planned acquisition of Tiffany, which would have been the biggest luxury goods deal in history.
The French conglomerate announced Wednesday that as things stand, it would “not be able to complete” the $16.2 billion deal—which was announced last November—because of “a succession of events which undermine the acquisition.”
Those events included a recent letter from the French government calling on the company to defer its takeover of Tiffany in response to the U.S. threat of taxes on French products, LVMH said in a statement.
The United States announced in July that it would impose tariffs of 25 percent on French products, including makeup and handbags, as part of a dispute over taxing digital companies, but delayed collection of the tariffs until Jan. 6, 2021. LVMH said Wednesday that the French government had “directed” it to delay the acquisition beyond that date.
The world’s biggest luxury group is based in Paris and controlled by French billionaire Bernard Arnault, Europe’s richest man.
CFO Jean Jacques Guiony said LVMH “had no other choice” but to honor the French government’s wishes. “It’s a governmental order,” he told journalists on a call Wednesday, adding that LVMH has no plans to close the deal at a later date.
But Tiffany said that the request from the French government had no legal grounds. The U.S. company said it had filed a lawsuit in Delaware that aims to force LVMH to complete the deal.
“We regret having to take this action but LVMH has left us no choice but to commence litigation to protect our company and our shareholders,” Tiffany Chairman Roger Farah said in a statement.
Tiffany shares plunged nearly 10 percent in New York, while LVMH shares dropped about 1 percent in Paris before regaining lost ground.
The breakdown comes after months of speculation that LVMH had been looking to renegotiate the deal—or for a way out—because of the crash in luxury sales due to the coronavirus. In June, the company disclosed that its board had met to review the agreement, as well as “the development of the pandemic.”
The deal would have cemented LVMH’s position in jewelry and helped it to compete with rival Swiss jewelry company Richemont, said Fflur Roberts, head of luxury goods research at Euromonitor International.
“With the acquisition of Tiffany, LVMH would have consolidated its position in the U.S. market, and would therefore be aiming for a more balanced geographic portfolio, after concerns were raised over the reliance of the luxury conglomerate upon China, Asia, and France,” Roberts told CNN Business.
‘Convenient for LVMH’
But then the coronavirus struck, forcing businesses including LVMH to reevaluate their expenditures, according to Luca Solca, a luxury goods research analyst at Bernstein.“I think the most important intervening factor between the time when the deal was agreed and now, is the COVID-19 pandemic,” he told CNN Business.
Solca said that the tariff threat LVMH cited on Wednesday was also significant. “Clearly, this demand by the French government happens to be convenient for LVMH,” he added.