LVMH Q1 dip
LVMH reported a 6% drop in revenue for Q1 2026, a concrete top-line decline the group disclosed this quarter. Analysts remain broadly positive despite the fall — MarketBeat reports the stock’s analyst consensus averages to a “Buy” rating across 10 covering analysts. (cineplex360.com)(marketbeat.com)
LVMH said first-quarter 2026 revenue fell 6% to €19.1 billion, its clearest top-line setback of the year so far. (lvmh.com) The company reported the figure on April 13 and said the quarter was shaped by a “global environment impacted by the conflict in the Middle East.” LVMH said the quarter still showed organic growth, even as reported revenue declined. (lvmh.com) LVMH entered 2026 after reporting €80.8 billion in 2025 revenue and a retail network of more than 6,280 stores across its brands. The group says it operates more than 75 maisons across six business sectors. (lvmh.com) That makes the first-quarter drop more than a one-brand stumble. LVMH is the largest luxury group in Europe, spanning Louis Vuitton, Dior, Sephora, Tiffany and Moët Hennessy, so its sales are treated as a readout on global luxury demand. (lvmh.com) Analysts have not turned broadly negative on the stock after the release. MarketBeat said on April 16 that 10 covering analysts still averaged a “Buy” rating, with four holds, two buys and four strong buys. (marketbeat.com) MarketBeat’s stock page for LVMUY, LVMH’s U.S. over-the-counter listing, showed the shares at $115.00 in afternoon trading on April 16, with a market capitalization of about $286.18 billion. The same page listed a 52-week range of $101.80 to $152.95. (marketbeat.com) The split view reflects the argument around luxury in 2026: current sales weakened, but many analysts still expect the biggest groups to hold pricing power and recover faster than smaller rivals. MarketBeat notes its consensus can differ from other firms because of methodology and available data. (marketbeat.com) LVMH’s next scheduled investor marker is its 2026 first-quarter revenue publication already posted on its financial calendar, which now shifts attention to how the group describes demand by region and division in the months ahead. For now, the headline number is simple: €19.1 billion, down 6% in the first quarter. (lvmh.com)