The €14 Billion Hermès Mystery: Heirs, Gardeners, and the War for Luxury
Chapter 01 · Portraits
The Hermès Family's
"Black Sheep"
Nicolas Puech — A fifth-generation heir, holding 6 million shares of Hermès, yet living in reclusion in Switzerland to evade taxes and escape family discipline.
Shareholding Structure
The Largest Individual Shareholder
Puech once held approximately 5.7% to 6% of Hermès shares. Within this vast empire of over 200 family shareholders, he stood as the largest single individual.
A Bizarre Turn of Events
"To pass his immense fortune to his Moroccan gardener, the septuagenarian decided—to adopt the man, who is twenty years his junior."
This was more than a display of devotion between master and servant; it was a desperate attempt to bypass the constraints of the family foundation. Yet, when he attempted to audit his assets, he discovered those 6 million shares had vanished.
Key Concept:Bearer Shares
The document dictates ownership
Much like cash, whoever holds the physical certificate is its master. Names are never recorded on the company’s ledger.
A Breeding Ground for Secrecy
Puech’s shares were "bearer shares." This meant that if the papers were handed over to someone else (such as his wealth manager, Eric Freymond) or sold in secret, Hermès would remain entirely unaware until the buyer declared their stake.
The Collapse of Trust
Puech signed numerous "blank documents" for his wealth advisor. When the AMF investigated, they discovered the shares had long since flowed through complex shell companies toward the notorious "Barbarian at the Gate" — LVMH.
LVMH’s "Trojan Horse"
“We simply
did not wish to settle in cash.”
Bernard Arnault utilizedEquity Swaps — a financial derivative — to bypass regulatory filings. LVMH placed bets with banks on the Hermès share price; what appeared to be a cash-settled wager was changed at the final hour to "physical delivery," instantly seizing 17% of Hermès shares.
The Battle for Hermès: H51
How does a family retaliate against a hostile takeover?
Locking Down the Next 20 Years
To combat LVMH, the remaining 52 family members established a holding company, H51. They locked away 50.2% of their collective shares, pledging not to sell for the next 20 years.
At what cost?
In compensation, Hermès issued massive special dividends. It was akin to telling the family: "Lock the doors tight; we shall provide you with ample allowance."
Why is Hermès Worth the Strife? (2023 Net Profit Margin)
Through disciplined production and profound scarcity, Hermès maintains profit margins that remain beyond the reach of its peers.
The Denouement: A Win-Win Defeat
Though LVMH was found in breach of regulations and fined, agreeing to relinquish its Hermès stake, it distributed those shares "in kind" to its own shareholders (primarily Dior).
Arnault failed to swallow Hermès, yet his entry cost was exceptionally low. This "failed" acquisition ultimately yielded billions of euros in paper returns for LVMH.
