Kering
Kering
French luxury conglomerate that owns Boucheron, Pomellato, Dodo, and Qeelin among its jewellery houses
Kering is a French luxury conglomerate listed on Euronext Paris, controlled by the Pinault family through their holding company Artémis. It is one of the three large publicly traded luxury groups, alongside LVMH and Richemont, and through its jewellery and watches division owns several established jewellery houses, principally Boucheron, Pomellato, Dodo, and Qeelin, together with the watch brands Girard-Perregaux and Ulysse Nardin.
Origins and structure
The group traces its corporate origin to a timber and distribution business founded by François Pinault in 1962, later renamed Pinault-Printemps-Redoute, then PPR, and finally Kering in 2013 to reflect its repositioning as a pure luxury holding. Its centre of gravity is Gucci, the Italian fashion and leather-goods house acquired in stages from 1999. Around Gucci sit Saint Laurent, Bottega Veneta, Balenciaga, Alexander McQueen, and the jewellery and watches division.
Jewellery houses
Boucheron, the Place Vendôme house founded in 1858, is the historical anchor of the jewellery portfolio, acquired in 2000. Pomellato, the Milanese house known for its colourful unfaceted-stone work and its no-engagement-ring philosophy, was acquired in 2013, along with its sister brand Dodo. Qeelin, the Hong Kong-based house founded by Dennis Chan in 2004, was acquired in 2012. Each house operates with its own creative direction and identity within the group.
Trade significance
For the trade Kering's jewellery footprint matters because group ownership shapes how the houses approach sourcing, sustainability disclosure, and pricing. Annual reporting under European listed-company rules provides public visibility into divisional revenues, store networks, and stated environmental and human-rights commitments. Buyers comparing the major houses can therefore assess group-level disclosures alongside the individual creative output of each name. Kering's jewellery and watches division remains smaller in revenue than its fashion houses but is treated by management as a strategic growth area.