Entity Dossier
Company

Peaudouce

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MoveInformation War Before Every BattleOperating PrincipleOpacity Through Entity RenamingStrategic PatternSell the Buyer His Own MoneyStrategic PatternBrand Prestige as Holding Company CurrencySignature MoveSell at the Ceiling, Buy at the CrashCornerstone MoveStack the Cascade, Keep 51% at Every FloorCornerstone MoveBuy the Wreckage, Extract the JewelsCornerstone MoveTurn Every Ally Into a Stepping StoneSignature MovePersonal Enrichment Through Internal TransfersRisk DoctrineCrash as Invitation, Not CrisisSignature MoveVictory Without Mercy, Then Make Them PayCapital StrategyGovernment Subsidies as Launch FuelRelationship LeverageGratitude Is a Disease of DogsCompetitive AdvantageProducer-to-Consumer Margin CaptureCapital StrategyStock Options as Majority Shareholder Self-EnrichmentIdentity & CultureGrandmother's Cult of SuperioritySignature MoveSilence the Dissent, Control the NarrativeDecision FrameworkCreditor Coercion by Liquidation ThreatSignature MoveAccelerated Deal and Integration TimelinesCornerstone MoveOpportunistic Restructuring and Asset FlipsRisk DoctrineProcedural Exploitation for Regulatory EdgesCompetitive AdvantageMinority Blocking as Power WedgeOperating PrincipleAsset-Led Value Creation Over SentimentStrategic PatternBrand Refurbishment as Power PlayRelationship LeverageOutsider Status as Negotiating LeverOperating PrincipleDeal Speed as Strategic ShockCornerstone MoveCascading Control PyramidsSignature MoveCharm as Camouflage in NegotiationsCornerstone MoveStock Market as Acquisition War ChestSignature MoveDirect Command and Relentless Central AuthorityIdentity & CultureCommunication Control After TakeoverSignature MoveLegal and Procedural Mastery to Avoid Takeover Costs

Primary Evidence

"he knows that in the midst of the Agache-Willot jumble, there are good deals, such as Peaudouce, Conforama, or La Belle Jardinière,"

Source:l'Ange Exterminateur

"Looking at it, the assets of the group appear considerable. Dior alone, according to an evaluation based on indications from the company, which will prove to be largely underestimated, would be worth around 1 billion francs. This is followed by Conforama (between 600 and 800 million), the Bon Marché-Belle Jardinière group (600 to 700 million), buildings (600 million) and Peaudouce (300 million). Not to mention the stocks valued at 1 billion. In total, nearly 5 billion francs, or nearly three times the amount of liabilities and twice as much as Arnault had estimated in his 1984 plan!"

Source:l'Ange Exterminateur

"Arnault proceeded with a capital increase of 7.3 billion for Dior to finance the contribution of LVMH shares. Of this amount, 4 billion were injected by Boussac Saint-Frères, which controlled Dior 100%, 2 billion came immediately from the sale of Peaudouce, and the remaining 2 billion were to be obtained through a later operation that Arnault was not yet willing to reveal. Regardless, the Arnault group ensured that it retained 58% of Dior. This allowed them to raise 3.3 billion on the market, offering 42% of Dior's capital, particularly to French and foreign institutional investors. Bernard Arnault thus completed his financing without losing control of his fashion house, which itself owned the LVMH shares."

Source:l'Ange Exterminateur

"On the floor below, Bernard Arnault houses Financière Agache et Férinel. Further down, a constellation of SMEs spread across four sectors of activity: luxury (Dior, Christian Lacroix, Céline), distribution (Bon Marché, Belle Jardinière, Conforama), industry (Peaudouce, Saint-Frères, Boussac) and finance (Facet, Crédit Financier Lillois) 7."

Source:The Taste of Luxury - Bernard Arnault and the Moët-Hennessy Louis Vuitton Story

"At the beginning of 1985, Bernard Arnault took stock. Since his visit to the Willot brothers six months ago, he has come a long way. He got what he wanted: the fashion house Dior, the flagship, but also a distribution group (Conforama, Belle Jardinière, and Bon Marché) with interesting real estate assets. He also acquired packaging factories and Peaudouce baby diapers. The downside: a dilapidated textile group."

Source:The Taste of Luxury - Bernard Arnault and the Moët-Hennessy Louis Vuitton Story

"The providential opportunity came with Peaudouce. The last French diaper company is very profitable. It generates a turnover of 2.1 billion francs and makes nearly 100 million in profits. Arnault will be able to sell it at a high price. Therefore, he begins negotiations with the Swedish group Mölnlyck in the fall. As a skilled negotiator, he manages to impose his price: 2 billion francs. This decision provokes the anger of the public authorities who threaten to refuse the sacred authorization for foreign investments in France to the Swedish group. "Peaudouce was too small to resist the global giants in the sector," argues Bernard Arnault. On January 20, 1988, he signs the sales agreement. At the same time, during a lunch with Christian Derveloy, the president of Prouvost, he negotiates the sale of his textile activities. 14."

Source:The Taste of Luxury - Bernard Arnault and the Moët-Hennessy Louis Vuitton Story

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