+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

This expensive luggage may be key to LVMH's future — here's how Rimowa's CEO plans to keep growing

Sep 20, 2024, 23:02 IST
Insider
Hugues Bonnet-Masimbert, CEO of Rimowa, told Business Insider that the company's buyers are split evenly between male and female.Brittany Chang/Business Insider
  • Luxury luggage maker Rimowa is one of LVMH's fastest-growing brands.
  • The US is one of Rimowa's top markets following its expansion from Europe and Asia into North America.
Advertisement

Luxury giant LVMH owns iconic household names like Louis Vuitton, Dior, and Tiffany and Co. And yet, one of its fastest-growing companies is a brand you might not have heard of — Rimowa.

It's a luggage maker best known for one product, a grooved aluminum suitcase with a rabid fan base. The least expensive carry-on model goes for $1,430, while the largest trunk rings in at $2,450.

Rimowa has been a key player in the suitcase industry since before it was acquired by LVMH in 2016. The 126-year-old German company is synonymous with two of the biggest hard-shelled luggage trends over the past century, following the debut of an aluminum version in the 1920s and a polycarbonate option eighty years later.

Rimowa manufactures its products in its factory in Germany.Brittany Chang/Business Insider

Scores of competitors like Away, Samsonite, and Tumi have since unveiled similar styles — most for a fraction of Rimowa's price.

Despite these other options, Rimowa's fan base has remained loyal to the brand's smooth wheels, timeless look, lifetime warranty, and status symbol title.

Advertisement

One buyer, Vanessa Garoute, 30, told Business Insider she considered herself a lifelong Rimowa client, having purchased six pieces since 2017.

Another, Tania Antonenkova, 32, estimated she and her husband have collected more than 17 of the high-end suitcases. (Martha Stewart, among other high-profile owners, also famously owns a collection of Rimowas and has publicly professed her love for the brand.)

Aluminum is synonymous with Rimowa's brand.Brittany Chang/Business Insider

With such devoted customers, it's no wonder these industrial-chic bags-on-wheels have been a beacon of light amid a recent dip in luxury goods sales due to a slowdown of demand in China.

While LVMH's overall operating profit dipped 8% in the first half of 2024 compared to the previous year, its fashion and leather goods segment, which includes Rimowa, saw a 6% drop.

Despite this, the suitcase company (along with cashmere maker Loro Piana) continued their "excellent momentum," LVMH said.

Advertisement

A spokesperson for Rimowa told BI that the luggage maker is now one of its parent company's fastest-growing brands.

Rimowa has been expanding its presence from Europe and Asia into North America, with the US now serving as one of its top markets, CEO Hugues Bonnet-Masimbert said in an interview.

Fashion meets mobility

Formula 1 star Lewis Hamilton pictured wearing Rimowa's new Original Bag.Clive Mason

For frequent travelers, Rimowa's iconic suitcases have become as much a style statement as they are a necessity. Looking ahead, the company could continue to drill into this unique niche while expanding into more everyday accessories.

In early September, Rimowa unveiled its new Original Bag, a $2,125 aluminum cross-body purse with the company's signature ribbed exterior. It's "another step in the fashion space," Bonnet-Masimbert said, and a hint of how the company hopes to progress in the coming years.

For a company so synonymous with luggage, it was an "interesting challenge," the CEO said — one that took three years to develop.

Advertisement
Rimowa's non-luggage products have been a recent development.Brittany Chang/Business Insider

The new purse isn't Rimowa's first move into the everyday accessories space. In the last five years, the company has debuted a growing portfolio of non-luggage products such as backpacks, duffle bags, and tote bags.

Luggage has remained its most popular product. However, according to Bonnet-Masimbert, these steps into the wearable market have been performing "extremely well."

"We feel we are very legitimate in that space, and that opens a lot of future product offerings," Bonnet-Masimbert said.

Expect more of it — "We have lots of things cooking," the company's CEO hinted.

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article