An investor group led by L Catterton—the private-equity firm majority-owned by LVMH—acquired a 20% stake in Flexjet for roughly $400 million, the companies announced this week. The transaction values the Cleveland-based fractional-jet operator at approximately $2 billion and marks the first institutional capital Flexjet has accepted since Directional Aviation Capital took it private in 2013. L Catterton now holds board representation. Flexjet operates 300+ aircraft across fractional ownership, leasing, and jet-card programs serving 6,000 account holders in North America and Europe.
The deal arrives as LVMH simultaneously pushes capital into its Belmond hotel portfolio—$1.2 billion in upgrades since the $3.2 billion 2019 acquisition—creating a vertically integrated luxury-travel stack rare outside Middle Eastern sovereign wealth. Belmond's 46 properties span train, river-cruise, and safari categories; Flexjet's fleet skews Gulfstream and Bombardier Global long-range. The overlap: single-family offices and chief-of-staff desks booking Venice Simplon-Orient-Express legs now see the same ownership backstop on their transatlantic Gulfstream G650 fractional shares. L Catterton managing partner Michael Farello joins Flexjet's board. Directional Aviation retains 80% and operational control under founder Kenn Ricci, who has resisted consolidation offers from Berkshire's NetJets and Wheels Up before its 2023 bankruptcy.
This matters because fractional aviation has bifurcated. NetJets commands 37% North American market share with 750+ aircraft but competes on fleet size and safety record, not lifestyle integration. VistaJet positions as the global challenger with 360° membership but lacks property or hospitality adjacencies. Flexjet's L Catterton backing creates optionality other operators cannot replicate: preferential booking windows at Belmond properties, co-branded experiences tied to LVMH's 75 maisons, and access to the conglomerate's 200,000-person workforce as a client-development engine. Family offices allocating $8–12 million annually to private aviation already layer in hotel, yacht, and experience spending; LVMH now captures more of that stack under a single reporting line. The structural advantage is dwell time: Flexjet knows when a client books a March ski week; Belmond's Crans-Montana property can pre-position inventory and staff. Meanwhile, rivals like Sentient Jet and Magellan Jets remain standalone operators selling hours, not ecosystems.
Operators and allocators should watch three developments over the next 12–18 months. First, whether Flexjet launches co-branded membership tiers with Belmond—likely by Q2 2025, when Belmond's Cadogan London renovation completes. Second, if L Catterton seeds follow-on capital into Flexjet's European expansion; the company currently holds 22% share in the EU fractional market versus 61% in North America, and regulatory tailwinds from the UK's post-Brexit aviation bilateral treaties create runway. Third, whether Directional Aviation monetizes additional stake to L Catterton or other LVMH-adjacent vehicles. Ricci has signaled openness to 49% institutional ownership before ceding control; another 29% tranche would value the business near $2.3 billion at current multiples and give LVMH effective governance without integration complexity.
Flexjet begins Q1 2025 deliveries of 28 Gulfstream G700s, the largest fleet order in the ultra-long-range category. L Catterton's prior aviation exposure includes a minority position in Surf Air, the regional membership carrier, which it exited in 2021. LVMH has not disclosed whether Flexjet economics will roll into reported segments or remain off-balance-sheet; the company's "Selective Retailing" division grew 12% year-over-year in 2023 to €21.3 billion, but aviation infrastructure does not map to existing reporting buckets. What does map: family offices now price private aviation against the same risk framework as their hotel and experience allocations.