thats news to me...
could the ysl/jacobs rumours turn true?
from fwd
could the ysl/jacobs rumours turn true?
WSJ: Marc Jacobs Laments His Deal with Bernard Arnault
Posted by Godfrey Deeny
February 09, 2004 @ 7:40 PM - New York
Everyone in New York fashion circles is talking about Monday’s front page in the Wall Street Journal, where Louis Vuitton's creative director Marc Jacobs very publicly unveils his dissatisfaction with his bosses, and deal, with LVMH.
Entitled “Wearing Thin, For Marc Jacobs, A Hot Partnership Needs Alterations,” the story chronicles the designer’s unhappiness with management at Louis Vuitton, his lack of creative control and the salary package paid to himself and his partner Robert Duffy.
From LVMH’s point of view, the story could not have come at a less opportune time. On Tuesday night Vuitton opens the largest store in its huge retail empire at 57th Street and Fifth Avenue, and stages a mega after-party in celebration of its 150th anniversary.
“I hit the jackpot. I got a front page,” beamed the author of the piece, the WSJ’s veteran fashion watcher, Terri Agins, as she greeted friends at Monday’s shows in Bryant Park.
The timing of the story itself would indicate that Jacobs’ discontent must be pretty deep, even if the feature recounts a lot of information already well-known to fashion insiders.
“I think Gucci treated Tom Ford better than LVMH treated me,” Jacobs tells the financial newspaper.
As has been reported ad infinitum, Ford and Domenico De Sole will leave their positions as creative director and ceo of the Gucci Group this spring after failing to agree on management control and fresh terms with the new owners of Gucci, the Pinault family, the great rivals of Bernard Arnault, chairman and controlling shareholder of LVMH.
Duffy and Jacobs also lament the heavy executive turnover at Marc Jacobs own house, which in seven years saw four different CEOs, all of who were appointed by LVMH and all of whom clashed with Duffy. LVMH began its relationship with Jacobs in 1996 when it first hired him and took a 34 percent stake in the financially troubled house. Today it owns 96 percent of the Marc Jacobs holding company.
Moreover, according to Duffy, both Jacobs and Duffy were paid less than $1 million annually. ....
....Further underling the difference in remuneration, Vuitton had annual sales of some $2.6 billion last year, compared with sales at the house of Gucci of around $1 billion.
So it sounds to us like Messers Jacobs and Duffy and Monsieur Arnault will have lots to talk about before tomorrow’s fete. Stay tuned.
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