The world’s richest person doesn’t tweet.
Bernard Arnault, the French tycoon behind luxury-goods powerhouse LVMH, surpassed Twitter owner Elon Musk on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index on Tuesday, marking the first time he’s topped the list of the wealthiest people. Never before has anyone from France—or Europe as a whole—laid claim to having the largest fortune on the planet.
The 73-year-old has long been a mainstay in wealth rankings, but, unlike Musk and other brash billionaires, makes only rare public appearances and isn’t personally active on social media. Though LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE oozes extravagance, with 75 labels ranging from Dom Perignon to Christian Dior to Tiffany & Co., he’s sought a low profile in a country where bling-bling displays of wealth are frowned upon.
Arnault, worth an estimated $170.8 billion, has used European craftsmanship to turn LVMH into the world’s biggest luxury-goods conglomerate. It’s a training ground for ambitious designers seeking to make a name for themselves: Marc Jacobs and the late Virgil Abloh at Louis Vuitton, Raf Simons at Christian Dior, Phoebe Philo at Celine. They all infused the heritage brands with novelty that kept them relevant to young consumers.
While weakening markets have also taken a bite out of Arnault’s wealth this year—his fortune is down about $7.2 billion in 2022—he’s fared better than the tech billionaires who dominate the world’s rich list. That’s because demand has remained resilient for high-end products as the Covid-19 crisis has ebbed.
Paris-based LVMH generated €64 billion ($68 billion) in sales last year, a sharp rebound from the depths of the pandemic in 2020. Arnault and his family own about 48% of the shares in the company, with 64% of the voting rights, according to its annual report. The shares slipped 0.4% in early Paris trading Wednesday, giving the company a €364 billion market value that’s the biggest in Europe.
A representative for Arnault didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Gem Spotted
Born in Roubaix in the north of France in 1949, Arnault graduated from the elite engineering school Polytechnique. He went on to work at the family business, Ferret Savinel, which focused on industrial construction, before moving in 1981 to the U.S., where he ventured into property development.
He returned to France and made his foray into luxury goods in 1984, when he took over Boussac Saint-Freres, the bankrupt textile group that owned a gem: Christian Dior. He spun off most of the company’s other businesses and used the windfall to buy a controlling stake in LVMH, whose two main companies, Louis Vuitton and Moet Hennessy, had merged in 1987.
Over the next three decades, he turned LVMH into a luxury behemoth selling Champagne, wine, spirits, fashion, leather goods, watches, jewelry, hotel stays, perfume and cosmetics through more than 5,500 stores worldwide. He was quick to grasp that China would become a key market, opening the first Louis Vuitton store in Beijing in 1992.
LVMH earlier this year lifted the age limit of its chief executive officer. That would allow Arnault to stay at the helm until 80, a sign he intends to be in charge for longer.
In his quest to stay under the radar, Arnault said in October that LVMH sold its private jet. Twitter accounts follow the planes of billionaires in an attempt to shame them about carbon emissions, and the subject became a hot topic in France, with some politicians proposing to ban or tax private jets.