Richemont, the world’s largest jewelry maker, has held talks with banks to discuss options for the London-based company, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the plans aren’t public. It may also consider a sale, two of the people said.
Richemont, based in Geneva, bought the two-thirds of Net-a-Porter it didn’t already own in a 2010 deal that valued the retailer at 350 million pounds ($550 million). Rene Weber, an analyst at Bank Vontobel, estimates Net-a-Porter’s sales reached 580 million euros ($728 million) in the year to March and will be about 660 million euros for fiscal 2015.
No final decision on a sale or IPO has been made, and Richemont may choose to keep the business. A representative for the company declined to comment. Richemont Chief Financial Officer Gary Saage said Nov. 7 that the luxury-goods maker hadn’t changed a decision made
last year to keep all its brands.
Richemont shares traded 1.5 percent higher at 86.25 Swiss francs at 9:14 a.m. in Zurich, giving the company a market value of 49.5 billion francs ($52 billion).
Net-a-Porter, which sells $2,495 Stella McCartney blazers and $4,900 Fendi handbags, is unprofitable and has been without a chief executive officer since July. Founded by former fashion journalist Natalie Massenet in 2000, the Web retailer faces increasing competition from sites such as Matchesfashion.com and Mytheresa.com, which department-store Neiman Marcus Group Ltd. agreed to buy in September.
Richemont said last year Net-a-Porter isn’t for sale, after reports it held talks to sell the unit to Italian rival Yoox SpA. A spinoff of Net-a-Porter would also revive speculation the company could break up its fashion and leather-goods division, a move it also ruled out last year.
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