MILAN — Italian fashion group Prada is set to hire former Luxottica chief Andrea Guerra in a top management role to ease a transition at the helm to the next generation of the founding family, a source with knowledge of the matter said.
Founded in Milan in 1913 by designer Miuccia Prada’s grandfather and his brother as a leather goods shop, Hong Kong-listed Prada has grown into a group with 365 directly operated shops as of end-2021 and yearly revenues of €3.7 billion ($3.8 billion), with 40% coming from the Asia Pacific region.
After overseeing a successful turnaround since 2017 to reverse a slide in sales, Prada CEO Patrizio Bertelli, 76, said a year ago he planned to hand over the reins of the group he leads with wife Miuccia to their 34-year-old son Lorenzo.
Lorenzo, who is Prada’s marketing chief, had joined the company’s board in May 2021 ahead of his father telling investors in November he could take over as CEO within “three to four years.”
Facing a family succession, like many other Italian business dynasties, Prada has been planning ahead and seeking a senior figure to work alongside Lorenzo while he gains experience in the field, another person close to the matter said.
Widely credited with being a fast learner, Lorenzo joined the family business in 2017 as head of digital communication.
Prada is putting the final touches to an accord with Mr. Guerra to hire the 57-year-old manager, who earlier this year stepped down as head of the hotels division at luxury goods giant LVMH, the first source said.
Prada and Mr. Guerra declined to comment on the news.
As Luxottica CEO from 2004 to 2014, Mr. Guerra oversaw a more than doubling in sales at the spectacles manufacturer that since 2003 has been producing and distributing eyeglasses under the Prada group’s Prada and Miu Miu brands.
Veteran Luxottica executive Massimo Vian, hired by Guerra in 2005 and later head of operations at the eyewear firm, joined Prada in 2020 as chief operating officer.
“We believe Guerra would add invaluable experience and significant gravitas to the Prada senior management team,” Jefferies said, adding the market would welcome progress on succession arrangements.
On the creative side, Prada in 2020 brought in Belgian designer Raf Simons to share the director role with Miuccia. Mr. Simons last week said he would close down his eponymous brand, in a move seen as a prelude to taking over in full from Miuccia.
Eleven years after its Hong Kong market debut, Prada is also studying a possible Milan listing to widen the investor base, another two sources briefed on the matter said. The move would not yield any cash or dent the family’s 80% stake because Prada would not sell new or existing shares.
Italian daily la Repubblica first reported the news that Prada could announce Mr. Guerra’s arrival as early as January. — Reuters