Kering shares retreated sharply on Monday after Morgan Stanley withdrew its bullish stance on the luxury conglomerate, revising its outlook mere days before critical financial disclosures.
Kering S.A., PPX.DE
The investment bank shifted its recommendation from “overweight” to “equal-weight” while reducing its 12-to-18-month target from €330 to €320. Shares dropped over 3% following the announcement.
Morgan Stanley’s rationale centered on valuation: Kering had delivered exceptional relative performance, beating out LVMH, Hermès, and Richemont by 300 to 1,700 basis points year-to-date. According to the firm, this surge has largely exhausted the stock’s near-term appreciation potential.
The shares peaked at €320.50 on January 12 before declining approximately 16% through Monday’s session. A dramatic 10.90% single-day rally on February 10 was subsequently erased by consecutive declines of 5.04% and 6.35% on March 2 and 3.
Gucci continues to represent the primary headwind. Morgan Stanley’s updated forecast calls for the flagship label to contract 6.2% in the first quarter of 2026, a deterioration from the previous 5% decline estimate. For calendar year 2026, Gucci is projected to deliver €5.95 billion in revenue, climbing to €7.67 billion by 2028.
The more pessimistic outlook also reflects weaker first-quarter field research and Kering’s Middle East exposure, which represents approximately 5% of total revenue.
The downgrade arrives at a pivotal juncture. Kering is scheduled to publish first-quarter 2026 results on April 14, with a Capital Markets Day presentation following on April 16. These events will serve as crucial tests of whether executive leadership’s turnaround narrative resonates with investors.
Morgan Stanley lowered its 2028 earnings per share forecast by 4% to €15.97, which still sits 15% above the Visible Alpha consensus of €13.80. At current levels, the stock commands roughly 17 times forward earnings.
The firm anticipates group-wide sales reaching €18.3 billion by 2028, representing approximately 25% growth from 2025’s €14.7 billion. Consolidated operating margin is expected to improve from 12.5% in 2026 to 18.4% by 2028.
Morgan Stanley’s optimistic scenario targets €480, predicated on a powerful Gucci resurgence and group margins expanding to 25.9% in 2028. The pessimistic case lands at €175, assuming the brand’s new creative direction fails to connect commercially. Options market pricing suggests approximately 28.9% probability of shares exceeding €320 within twelve months, and 17.1% odds of falling below €175.
The bank identified two potential catalysts for upgrading again: continued organizational transformation under CEO Luca de Meo, who assumed the role in September 2025, and tangible proof of genuine commercial momentum at Gucci.
Notably, Morgan Stanley had elevated Kering to a top pick in October 2025, highlighting it as a preferred European luxury investment and praising the sector’s “burst of creativity.” Monday’s downgrade represents a complete reversal from that optimistic stance.
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