Tag: brand lesson

  • Why Fenty Fashion X LVMH Failed: A Luxury Brand Lesson in Category, Not Celebrity

    The standard story is that Rihanna’s fashion house failed because celebrity alone could not carry it. That story is now five years old. It has also aged badly.

    The more interesting question, and the one luxury operators should be asking in 2026, is why even Fenty Beauty (the supposed proof the model worked) is now being shopped around by LVMH at a $1–2 billion valuation, with North American sales reportedly down double digits. The Fenty episode was never really a story about celebrity. It was, and is, a story about category.

    The deal that looked impossible to lose

    On 22 May 2019, in Paris, LVMH and Rihanna launched a ready-to-wear maison from scratch. Only the second time Bernard Arnault’s group had tried to build a fashion house rather than buy one. The first was Christian Lacroix in 1987.

    Rihanna became the first woman to launch an original brand within the group, and the first woman of colour to lead an LVMH maison. Each side reportedly put in around €30 million. Twenty-one months later, on 10 February 2021, the maison was paused. Accounts filed by Rihanna’s UK holding entity, which surfaced in late 2025, put her personal loss at roughly $36 million.

    LVMH’s public language was a strategic recalibration. The internal warning had been louder and earlier. In October 2020, the group’s CFO, Jean-Jacques Guiony, told analysts the brand was still in the launching phase and that figuring out the right offer was not easy. That was four months before the closure. The pandemic was the accelerant, not the cause.

    The three reasons every case study keeps teaching

    The diagnosis is now well-rehearsed. It is also worth sharpening.

    1. Pricing without permission: Pieces ran roughly $200 to $1,500, with a denim jacket near a thousand dollars. That is a price built for a customer Rihanna’s mass-cultural fanbase mostly does not contain. The audience that crashed Fenty Beauty’s site for a $39 foundation does not automatically move on to four-figure ready-to-wear.

    2. Distribution against type: Fenty Maison sold mostly through its own dot-com, with low-key pop-ups at Bergdorf Goodman and Galeries Lafayette. Luxury fashion is theatre. Runway, atelier, flagship, the slow build of social proof on the bodies of editors and clients. Digital-first launches a beauty brand. It rarely scales a maison.

    3. A meaning gap: Fenty Beauty answered an audible market question on day one: forty foundation shades, inclusivity engineered into the product itself. Fenty Fashion never landed the equivalent answer. Why this house, at this price, with this point of view? Not in a language a buyer, an editor, or a stockist could repeat back without prompting.

    The lesson is structural, not anecdotal

    What most case studies miss is that LVMH’s failure mode here was not new.

    Christian Lacroix, the previous launch-from-scratch attempt, accumulated more than €44 million in cumulative losses across eighteen years before the group sold it in 2005. It filed for bankruptcy four years later. Edun, the celebrity-led label LVMH was also associated with, was wound down in 2018.

    Across three different decades, the pattern is the same. LVMH has a near-flawless playbook for acquiring established maisons, and almost no working playbook for building one. Putting an unprecedented founder at the helm of an unprecedented launch did not change the underlying mechanics. (I’ve written about the full arc of that partnership in LVMH × Rihanna: When Stars Fall.)

    This is the part operators should pay attention to. Fenty Fashion did not stall because Rihanna could not sell luxury. It stalled because LVMH was running a beauty incubator dressed up as a fashion launch.

    Why the 2026 footnote matters

    The cleaner reading was always that Fenty was a tale of two categories. Fashion stalled, beauty scaled. That reading is now under pressure.

    In October 2025, Reuters reported that LVMH was exploring a sale of its 50% stake in Fenty Beauty. Business of Fashion and Puck have since put the target valuation at $1–2 billion. Net sales were still around $450 million in 2024, but peak revenue was reportedly in 2021, and a source close to Sephora has said North American sales are now down double digits.

    That reframes the original failure. What looked, in 2021, like proof that celebrity-led beauty was a durable model now looks more like a half-decade window of borrowed cultural relevance. Vivid. Valuable. Finite. The founder cannot be the daily storyteller forever. The category has to take over.

    What this means for India’s luxury moment

    India’s luxury market is being shaped by exactly this temptation. Reliance has just brought Fenty Beauty into the country through Sephora and Tira. The next move is almost inevitable. An Indian conglomerate will, soon, bankroll a domestic celebrity-fronted luxury label. The country’s first Fenty-style swing.

    Built on real category logic, this works. Run as a hype play, it ends in twenty-one months and a write-off. The discipline is to ask, before signing the term sheet, the question Fenty Fashion could not answer. What is the unmet need this category lets us solve, and what is the architecture (pricing, distribution, craft, narrative) that protects that answer once the founder’s spotlight moves elsewhere?

    Hype gets the launch. Architecture keeps the company.

    The cheapest place to learn this is somebody else’s $36 million.