A former LVMH executive is launching VYKO Group, a holding company built to acquire and scale emerging Irish luxury brands. This is not a vanity project. The playbook is explicitly modelled on LVMH's consolidation logic, applied to a market that has never had institutional luxury infrastructure. At the same moment that heritage conglomerates are under pressure to justify scale, a new generation of operators is building the next tier from scratch, in markets the incumbents ignored. Ireland is the test case, but the pattern is the signal: the next luxury group will not come from Paris.
Three stories today point to the same defensive instinct hardening across sectors. China blocked Meta's Manus acquisition to keep AI knowledge inside its borders. Fondazione Sozzani launched a formal award to bring emerging creative talent inside institutional structures.
A former LVMH executive is building a holding company to consolidate Irish luxury before anyone else does. The move is the same in each case: identify something scarce and valuable, build a structure around it before the market prices it correctly. The era of open access, open talent, and open platforms is closing. What replaces it is controlled infrastructure, and the organisations building it now will set the terms for everyone else in three to five years.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.