KEY POINTS
  • Tiffany beat Wall Street expectations for quarterly profit as the U.S. jeweler benefited from an over 70% rise in sales in China and a recovery in demand at home.
  • The company is in the process of being bought by French luxury giant LVMH.
  • Tiffany forecast a mid-single-digit percentage decline in holiday quarter sales, while analysts had predicted a 3% drop.
Tiffany & Co. gift boxes seen in a store window.

Tiffany, which is being bought by French luxury giant LVMH, beat Wall Street expectations for quarterly profit on Tuesday as the U.S. jeweler benefited from an over 70% rise in sales in China and a recovery in demand at home.

The results bode well for the upcoming holiday season for the jeweler and other luxury retailers in general, which have been hit hard by the pandemic. They also underscore the growing importance of sales within mainland China to offset dependence on tourism, especially on Chinese tourists visiting fashion hubs like Milan and Paris.