Louis Vuitton’s new 17,000-square-foot development in Shanghai is, quite literally, the luxury brand’s Chinese flagship. The structure, which serves as a store, restaurant, museum and billboard, is shaped like a giant boat, its hull emblazoned with Louis Vuitton’s unmistakable monogram print. To some, it is also a metaphor for Louis Vuitton’s parent company, LVMH, which is floundering in China and beyond. Is it a superyacht headed for promising new waters, asks Flavio Cereda-Parin of GAM, an asset manager, or “Titanic 2.0”?
Trending
- Why Wall Street wasn’t won over by Nvidia’s big conference
- Publisher pulls horror novel ‘Shy Girl’ over AI concerns
- It’s been 20 years since the first tweet
- Delve accused of misleading customers with ‘fake compliance’
- How fusion power works and the startups pursuing it
- Amid legal turmoil, Kalshi is temporarily banned in Nevada
- Record Heat Meets a Major Snow Drought Across the West
- What happened at Nvidia GTC: NemoClaw, Robot Olaf, and a $1 trillion bet
