A consortium anchored by LVMH's investment arm acquired a 20% stake in Flexjet, the Cleveland-based fractional jet operator serving roughly 4,200 owners across North America and Europe. Terms were not disclosed, but the deal values Flexjet at an estimated $3.2 billion based on private secondary transactions in late 2024, according to people familiar with the matter. LVMH Private Equity led the investor group alongside two unnamed family offices, neither of which hold positions in competing operators.
Flexjet operates a 240-aircraft fleet split between Gulfstream, Bombardier, and Embraer platforms, with 80% of owners opting for fractional ownership rather than jet card or charter-only programs. The company reported $2.1 billion in revenue for fiscal 2024, up 14% year-over-year, driven primarily by share purchases in the Gulfstream G650ER and Bombardier Global 7500 programs. Fractional ownership requires buyers to purchase a minimum share equivalent to 50 flight hours annually, with upfront capital commitments ranging from $1.4 million to $7.8 million depending on aircraft type. Flexjet retains operational control, maintenance, and crew scheduling across the fleet.
The stake extends LVMH's decade-long repositioning from pure luxury goods into high-touch service businesses adjacent to its core clientele. The conglomerate acquired Belmond in 2019 for $3.2 billion, gaining 46 hotels, trains, and river cruises concentrated in Italy, Peru, and Southeast Asia. Belmond properties now serve as anchor points for LVMH's watch, jewelry, and champagne distribution, with on-site boutiques at 22 hotels generating an estimated $140 million in retail sales annually. Flexjet offers a parallel distribution opportunity: owners spend an average of $380,000 per year on flight services, and 67% fall within LVMH's target demographic of individuals with liquid assets exceeding $30 million. The company already partners with Tiffany, Moët Hennessy, and Loro Piana for in-flight amenities, but equity ownership allows LVMH to formalize those relationships and introduce joint membership programs linking aviation, hospitality, and retail.
Flexjet competes directly with NetJets, which holds 42% of the North American fractional market, and VistaJet, dominant in Europe and the Middle East. NetJets, owned by Berkshire Hathaway, operates 750+ aircraft and reported $8.4 billion in revenue for 2024, but has struggled with pilot retention and delayed deliveries from Textron. Flexjet's smaller scale allows faster fleet upgrades and tighter margin control; the company replaced 60 mid-size jets with ultra-long-range platforms between 2022 and 2024, reducing operating cost per flight hour by 9% while raising average contract values. LVMH's capital and network access could accelerate that cadence. Worth noting: Flexjet ordered 38 new Gulfstream G700s in December, with deliveries scheduled through 2028, suggesting the deal includes commitments for additional fleet expansion.
Operators should watch for membership-tier integrations between Flexjet, Belmond, and Cheval Blanc hotels, likely launching in Q2 2025 based on internal timelines shared with franchise partners. Family offices managing aviation budgets should track whether LVMH introduces fractional share financing tied to art lending or real estate collateral, a structure it piloted with Belmond in 2023. The next disclosure point is Flexjet's Q1 earnings in May, which will clarify whether the group acquired board representation or remains a passive stake.
The transaction marks the first time a European luxury conglomerate has taken equity in a U.S. fractional jet operator rather than launching a branded charter service, a path Hermès and Richemont explored but abandoned in 2021 after failing to secure aircraft allocations from Gulfstream.