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The film was a box office success. By the end of April 2016, the film had been seen by 315,183 cinemagoers in France. [1] [8]Bernard Arnault, when asked about the film by a shareholder at a meeting on 7 April 2016, responded, "LVMH is the illustration, the incarnation of the worst, according to these extreme leftist observers, of what the market economy produces."
Bernard Jean Étienne Arnault was born on 5 March 1949 in Roubaix. [5] [6] His mother, pianist Marie-Josèphe Savinel, daughter of Étienne Savinel, had a "fascination for Dior". [6] His father, manufacturer Jean Léon Arnault, a graduate of École Centrale Paris, owned the civil engineering company Ferret-Savinel. [6]
Bernard Arnault is Chairman and CEO of LVMH and Chairman of Christian Dior SE. In 2017, Arnault purchased all the remaining Christian Dior shares in a reported $13.1 billion buyout. [63] At the end of 2017, the only declared major shareholder in LVMH was the Arnault Family Group, the holding company of Bernard Arnault.
Under CEO Bernard Arnault’s eldest son, Antoine Arnault, and LVMH’s North America head, Anish Melwani, the new platform will aim to market and place the French fashion group’s products in ...
Bernard Arnault’s reputation as a master dealmaker predates the founding of LVMH, the luxury conglomerate he runs, in 1987. Three years before that, the French businessman bought Christian Dior ...
Aglaé Ventures, a tech-focused venture fund owned by the Arnault family office, has invested in five AI companies this year, CNBC reported, citing data from private wealth management platform Fintrx.
The factory had been run by a company owned by Bernard Arnault, France's richest man. The film follows Ruffin's efforts to force Arnault to pay back the Klurs for "ruining their lives". [15] Before making the film, Ruffin had been investigating Arnault's business affairs for several years, [13] and he met the Klurs in the course of his ...
Bernard Arnault, CEO of luxury ... It’s been Arnault’s fortune to lose since he began helming LVMH in 1989 after spending $2.6 billion for company shares to become its largest stakeholder.