Prada just made the biggest purchase in its history by buying Versace for $1.4 billion, bringing the two Italian luxury labels together

“Versace has huge potential,” said Andrea Guerra, CEO of Prada, upon the deal’s closing.

Apr 11, 2025 - 08:36
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Prada just made the biggest purchase in its history by buying Versace for $1.4 billion, bringing the two Italian luxury labels together

Luxury major Prada will buy Versace for $1.38 billion from American parent company Capri Holdings.

The long-anticipated deal will bring together two leading Italian labels in the luxury segment, albeit with diverging fortunes.

“The acquisition of Versace marks another step in the evolutionary journey of our group, adding a new dimension, different and complementary,” Andrea Guerra, CEO of Prada, said in a release. “Versace has huge potential. The journey will be long and will require disciplined execution and patience.”

Speculation before the deal’s finalization suggested Prada had negotiated down its initial purchase price of Versace owing to tariff-related pressures.

The purchase, which is Prada’s largest in its 112-year history, could be a big boost for the company amid a period of sector-defying growth.

On a call following the announcement, Guerra said that the goal of the deal was to revitalize the Versace brand as it has struggled in recent times.

Prada reported a 15% jump in annual net sales worth €5.4 billion ($6 billion) in March. Miu Miu, Prada’s sister brand, has been instrumental in the company’s recent growth streak, as its revenues soared by 93% last year. Meanwhile, Versace’s sales dropped 15% in the third quarter of the current fiscal year.

Prada’s acquisition of Versace makes “strategic sense since both of these brands pass through fashion cycles, and ownership of multiple brands with very different aesthetics (maximalist for Versace and minimalist for Prada and Miu Miu) could help smooth the cyclicality of performance,” Morningstar senior equity analyst Jelena Sokolova said in a note Thursday.

Last month, Donatella Versace, the creative director and brains behind Versace’s ascent, announced she’d be stepping down after 30 years. At the start of April, Dario Vitale, who oversaw design at Prada’s sister brand, Miu Miu, filled her role.

The deal comes at a tricky time for luxury purveyors, many of whom have been impacted by a pullback in consumer spending. Tariffs would have added yet another hurdle for the sector by hurting consumer sentiment and pushing prices upwards. However, a 90-day pause on the levies against Europe could give companies more time to strategize on their path forward.

Prada’s shares were up nearly 5% as of 2 p.m. London time.

Update, April 10, 2025: This article has been updated with remarks made on Prada's financial update call.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com