Closing Price reads the signal where luxury equities meet the alternative-asset markets underneath them. Each market day, with a deeper week-in-review every Friday, host Sharon Obuobi tracks the listed companies behind the world's great luxury brands and auction houses — LVMH, Hermès, Richemont, Ferrari, and the major houses — against ALT/FNDATA's proprietary resale and auction data across watches, jewelry, fine art, handbags, and collector cars. The edge is the divergence between where the stocks trade and where end-demand actually sits. For investors and analysts who want the demand behind the price, not just the ticker.
Learn more and access the data at www.altfndata.com
CLOSING PRICE — Monday, June 8, 2026
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[INTRO]
Good evening. It's Monday, June the 8th. I'm Sharon Obuobi, and this is Closing Price from ALT/FNDATA.
Tonight: Signet announces a 50-million-dollar buyback, Ferrari holds its premium, and three major products are launched by luxury watch brands.
[LUXURY EQUITIES — THE OPEN]
This week, the major European luxury names opened lower, down 1 - 2% against Friday's close last week.
LVMH, ticker MC on Euronext Paris, opened at 473 euros, down from a Friday close of 479.
Hermes, ticker RMS, opened at 1,591 euros, down from 1,619.
Kering, ticker KER, opened at 244 euros, down from 249.
In Zurich, Richemont, ticker CFR, opened at 162 Swiss francs, down from 164, and Swatch, ticker UHR, opened at 201 francs, down from 203.
In London, Watches of Switzerland, ticker WOSG, opened at 705 pence, down from 717.
[THE TAPE TODAY]
The luxury market weakness was not sector-specific. It followed Friday's global tech selloff. Today the broader market rebounded. Bloomberg reports chip stocks heading for their best day in a year as dip buyers returned, and the Nasdaq turned higher.
We have two macro signals which frame the week. Bank of America says it is time to take profits, citing a growing list of bear-market signposts.
And Reuters reports Goldman Sachs has pushed its Federal Reserve rate-cut call out to 2027 on strong US jobs data.
[SIGNET JEWELERS — THE BUYBACK]
The clearest corporate signal today came from mass-market jewelry. Signet Jewelers, ticker SIG, the parent of Kay, Zales, and Jared, entered a $50 million dollar accelerated share repurchase with Goldman Sachs. Signet sits at the volume end of America's diamond and bridal business.
[WATCH RELEASES AND THE NAMES BEHIND THEM]
Three watch products were launched morning, even as the sector's equities slipped.
TAG Heuer (a LVMH brand) released a sand-coloured Carrera Chronograph Glassbox limited edition.
Hermes introduced the Arceau Cavalier en Formes, drawing on its equestrian heritage.
And Raymond Weil launched the A.R.T. collection.
[CAR]
In the automobile market, Ferrari, ticker RACE, remains the sector's outlier. Seeking Alpha today examined the convergence of Porsche and Ferrari, with Porsche moving to protect scarcity and pricing in a strategy similar to that of Ferrari which posted a 29.5 percent operating margin in 2025.
[SECTOR SNAPSHOT]
- LVMH (MC.PA): EUR 473.15 open / 479.05 prior (-1.2%)
- Hermes (RMS.PA): EUR 1591 / 1619 (-1.7%)
- Richemont (CFR.SW): CHF 162.15 / 164.65 (-1.5%)
- Kering (KER.PA): EUR 244.50 / 249.45 (-2.0%)
- Swatch (UHR.SW): CHF 201.20 / 203.30 (-1.0%)
- Watches of Switzerland (WOSG.L): 705.5p / 717.0p (-1.6%)
- Signet (SIG): USD 50M accelerated buyback announced
- Ferrari (RACE): 29.5% FY25 operating margin
[OUTRO]
That is Closing Price for Monday, June the 8th.
I'm Sharon, from ALT/FNDATA. Open Bid returns tomorrow morning at six AM Eastern.
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