PARIS — For decades, France's LVMH has been the face of luxury for the wealthy who tote Louis Vuitton bags, don Christian Dior clothing, spritz Bulgari perfume and sip Veuve Clicquot Champagne.
This week, the world's dominant luxury group — home to 75 high-end brands across fashion, jewelry, watches and alcohol — will be the face of a global event for the masses: the Paris Olympics, with its billions of viewers around the planet.
With a major sponsorship role aimed at burnishing the image of the Games and the French capital, it's a new chapter in LVMH's specialty of selling exclusivity at a grand scale under its chair and CEO, Bernard Arnault.
Assembling and growing dozens of exclusive labels under one powerhouse roof has put Arnault, 75, at the very top of Forbes' list of the world's richest people. As recently as June 3, Forbes estimated his wealth at $207 billion, narrowly ahead of Tesla's Elon Musk and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. With ever-shifting stock-market prices, the three men often trade places (according to Forbes' real-time billionaires list on Tuesday, Arnault and his family are currently No. 3).
LVMH's cosmetics brand Sephora sponsored the Olympic torch relay. Berluti designed France's opening ceremony uniforms. Jeweler Chaumet crafted the Olympic medals. Those will rest in cases designed by Louis Vuitton, whose headquarters at 2 Rue Pont Neuf will be hard to miss as the opening ceremony parade floats by on the Seine River.
''We tried to find a way to do it, to do something else than just signing a check and getting billboards on the side of the streets,'' Antoine Arnault — LVMH's head of environment and image and Arnault's eldest son — told The Associated Press on Monday.
The extent of LVMH's involvement is ''unprecedented for a luxury brand,'' says Luca Solca, luxury goods analyst at research firm Bernstein. Where such brands used to focus on athletic pursuits more associated with the rich — tennis, equestrian sports and yacht racing — LVMH and its competitors have increasingly used mass sports to reach customers and place a halo of excellence around their products.
''The prize is a high-level association to sports as a universal language that all consumers understand,'' Solca says.