Ginette Moulin, the owner of French department store group Galeries Lafayette, died on Sunday at the age of 98, the group confirmed to the AFP agency on Tuesday.
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Moulin was the granddaughter of Théophile Bader, who founded the department store with Alphonse Kahn in Paris in 1894.
With her family, Moulin was ranked 34th in Challenges magazine’s list of French billionaires, with a business fortune worth €4.05 billion.
In August 2024, Moulin handed over the reins of the family holding company Motier to her son-in-law Philippe Houzé, assisted by her grandchildren Nicolas Houzé, Guillaume Houzé and Arthur Lemoine. The group said the handover had been planned “well in advance.”
Moulin was a key figure in the family history of Galeries Lafayette. She personally knew the members of the five generations that successively took the helm of the iconic Parisian store with its flagship on Boulevard Haussmann.
She was born on February 7 1927, the daughter of Max Heilbronn, a resistance fighter deported during World War II to Buchenwald, Germany, where he met Etienne Moulin, the man who later was to marry his daughter.
As of January 2025, the Galeries Lafayette group operated 57 branches in France, of which 19 are directly owned and 38 operated by franchised partners.
In January, the group said it is planning to close by the end of 2025 its two branches in Marseilles, which “have been posting recurring losses for several years,” and pledged to “promote the redeployment of the 145 employees concerned.”
At the end of 2023, the group sold another iconic Parisian department store, the Bazar de l’Hotel de Ville (BHV), ceding it to a small property company named Société des Grands Magasins (SGM).
Philippe Houzé, who was named Galeries Lafayette board chairman in 2005 and will succeed Moulin as president of Motier, is the husband of Christiane, one of the Moulin couple’s three daughters.
“He will be tasked with overseeing the growth of the Moulin family’s assets, which include the Galeries Lafayette group, [French e-tailer] La Redoute, and a significant stake in the Carrefour group,” said Galeries Lafayette in January.
The Galeries Lafayette owners have been major shareholders of French grocery distribution giant Carrefour since 2014, even if they are not the main shareholder from March 2024, when Carrefour bought 25 million of its shares from Galfa, a company owned by the Moulin family.
In this capacity, Philippe Houzé is vice-chairman of the board of directors at Carrefour, which also includes Patricia Moulin Lemoine, Ginette Moulin’s eldest daughter.
Three of Ginette Moulin’s grandchildren, Nicolas Houzé, Guillaume Houzé and Arthur Lemoine, were also appointed vice-presidents of Motier.
“Planned” handover
This governance change came at the end of a chaotic period for the Galeries Lafayette group, which for several years has been impacted by the consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic on its global business.
The pandemic and related travel restrictions deprived the group of large parts of its clientèle, and business was severely undermined by the lockdowns in 2020 and 2021.
In mid-December, event sales website BazarChic, owned by Galeries Lafayette, began a “winding down procedure” that various media outlets said would threaten about 100 jobs, unless a buyer is found.
Last June, Galeries Lafayette indicated that in 2024 it wanted to recapture its 2019 revenue level, equivalent to €3.85 billion generated by the chain as a whole. Galeries Lafayette, which celebrated its 130th anniversary in 2024, reported €3.6 billion worth of sales by the chain in 2023, of which €1.9 billion by the Boulevard Haussmann branch alone.
Premium formalwear brand LK Bennett has posted a loss with its accounts for the year to last January. The London-based womenswear, footwear and accessories retailer said in a Companies House accounts filing that it made a pre-tax loss of £3.1 million in the 12 months compared to a pre-tax profit of £2.3 million in the previous period.
LK Bennett
We don’t yet know any details of how it’s fared since then with its accounts filing for its next financial year not likely to come until later this year or early next.
The company swinging to a pre-tax loss came as it also saw revenue falling to £42.1 million from £48.7 million during the year. The gross margin also fell quite sharply from 61.9% in the previous financial period 254.9% this time. The net loss for the year was £3.5 million after a net profit of £1.8 million in the previous year.
It said it was affected by the tough economic climate in the UK as well as global events that added to inflation and the overall cost-of-living crisis.
While it operates stores in mainland Europe and Ireland, the UK is an important part of the company’s business both for its physical stores and it’s online store and it added that it’s important that it “reacts to the marketplace and relevant changes in consumer spending as rapidly as possible”.
What that meant was an intention post period end “to review customer requirements and ensure the product range matches these expectations”. In practice that has included adding relevant new categories and adding to its size range.
At the time, the directors also added that they were remain confident about the businesses ability to react positively to the challenges out there.
UK online spending rose 2.9% year on year to hit £8.1 billion in January, according to new data from Adobe Analytics. It followed annual growth of 19.9% in December, although this was impacted by Cyber Monday falling in December 2024 against November 2023.
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Overall, spend increased 5.9% during the whole festive period and with the almost-3% January rise, Adobe said it indicated “continued consumer confidence and online spending power following 2024’s record holiday spending period”.
So what were people buying last month? Health & wellbeing were key, we’re told.
“Shoppers looking to start the year well, focused their spending [here]”, Adobe explained. “Consumers browsed online to upgrade their home gym, with online purchases of exercise equipment rising by 60% when compared with the previous month. Health and nutrition were top of mind, as online spending on natural supplements including multivitamin powders and pills increased by 26% and fruits and vegetables by 24%”.
Consumers also enjoyed discount deals across categories including apparel (-5.2%), sporting goods (-1.9%), furniture (-2.9%), and appliances (-1.2%), “as retailers kept prices competitive to stimulate demand after record spending between November [and] December”.
But while they may have been spending freely, shoppers were also still reliant on buy now, pay later (BNPL) services to boost their spending capabilities. In January, £1.26 billion was spent via BNPL, accounting for 15% of total January spend, and up 3.3% compared to January 2024.
Vivek Pandya, lead analyst, Adobe Digital Insights at Adobe commented: “After indulging in deep online discounts during the holiday season, shoppers kicked off 2025 by putting their money where their health is and spending on items to boost their wellness and fitness. Consumers also took advantage of continued discounting in January with online retailers dropping the prices of apparel, sporting goods, furniture and appliances in an effort to avoid a post-Christmas spending hangover.”
The Adobe Digital Insights team used Adobe Analytics to analyse hundreds-of-millions of visits to retail sites from UK consumers in January 2025, tracking 100 million stock-keeping units (SKUs) across 18 product categories.
The reigning queen of American sportswear Tory Burch was back in action Monday evening with a quirky take on her oeuvre inside a true temple of modernism.
La Tory chose the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) on 53rd street, for the first show ever inside the actual building, even if colleagues have staged runway displays in the museum’s garden.
Career-gal cool from Burch, who has built an empire on providing clothes that make women feel like they have a lead part in a new Manhattan-based drama series on Netflix.
Like Burch herself, the Tory gal is an overachiever, who manages to combine a certain je ne sais quoi chic with appealingly functional style. Burch’s initial choice of garments was typical this season – working trackpants, casual sweaters or wool cardigans – but the fresh surfaces and detailing she gave them all was very impressive.
She broke new ground with a great series of handbag jackets in calfskin or felt – covered in multiple different sized pockets, like a monochrome de Stijl composition. While her excellently cut embroidered wool coats recalled a cubist image by George Braque.
“Twisted American sportswear. A second chance at classics… Women are defining classic for themselves,” argued Tory in her program notes. Staying true to that dictum in this collection.
Guests were divided into two floors, with most of the paparazzi action upstairs in Marron Family Atrium. The house had to install a large white wall to cover several works of art, for which MOMA could not provide visual rights in a show. Another wall was a humongous LED screen showing panning shots of guests arriving, where one could wave at oneself occasionally.
Given the crisp production, the cackling track “Haha” by Charlotte Adigéry & Bolis Pupul jarred irritatingly to both begin and end the show.
Apart from that small lapse, this was an impressive display from the 58-year-old Tory Burch, who took a languid bow looking remarkably unchanged from when she first appeared on the fashion scene with a small presentation in Little Italy back in 2024. Today, Tory Burch is sold in over 3,000 stores. Like we said, overachiever chic.