The Dream of ‘an American LVMH’ Dims With FTC Challenge to Tapestry and Capri Merger

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The American fashion industry has long dreamed of building a multi-branded mega player along the lines of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton or Kering.

But even if it was an elusive dream — complicated by the realities of dealmaking, brand building and consumer whimsy — it seemed like a dream worth dreaming.

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Now, the Federal Trade Commission’s challenge to Tapestry Inc.’s $8.5 billion takeover of Capri Holdings is signaling that regulators are going to take a very hard look before allowing any company like that to come together.

“What the FTC is saying is, what Bernard Arnault has built with LVMH is and what Kering Group is and what Richemont is — that’s just never going to happen in America,” said attorney Jonathan Lazarow, founding member and co-chair of Ambrose, Mills & Lazarow’s Corporate Group.

“They don’t value it. They don’t see it the same way,” Lazarow said. “The FTC doesn’t view those luxury groups in the same way that the luxury groups view themselves. They’re about creating environments where artists could create commercial art — and [the regulators] don’t see it.”

Instead, the FTC is seeing a competitive threat that could raise prices and leave consumers with fewer options if Tapestry is able to bring together its brands, Coach, Kate Spade and Stuart Weitzman, with Capri’s portfolio of Michael Kors, Versace and Jimmy Choo.

Whether because of politics or an antitrust evolution, the FTC seems to have teeth again — at least when it comes to the fashion industry.

That complicates life for other dealmakers looking to make their own move to reshape the industry.

For instance, Richard Baker’s continuing push to buy Neiman Marcus and combine it with Saks and create a luxury department store with a new kind of scale now has a new gauntlet to run.

Lazarow said if he were asked to advise on that deal, he would ask: “What are you trying to create and how can we create a combined entity that demonstrates that we’re not hurting competition?”

It’s a question that is on the minds of bankers and dealmakers throughout an industry that has gotten used to what was effectively a rubber stamp from regulators.

“It scares the s–t out of me,” said one investment banker who works in the fashion space and asked not to be named. “If you’re going to push back on this, you’re going to push back on anything.