Moncler is a publicly traded Italian luxury group; its largest and controlling shareholder is Remo Ruffini , who holds his stake through his holding vehicles (notably Double R / Ruffini Partecipazioni), while the rest of the company is mainly owned by institutional investors and a spread of other shareholders.

Quick Scoop: Who really owns Moncler?

  • Moncler S.p.A. is listed on the Italian stock exchange, so there is no single 100% owner.
  • Remo Ruffini is the key figure: he is the main shareholder and long‑time architect of the brand’s modern strategy.
  • He holds his shares via holding companies (notably Double R / Ruffini Partecipazioni), which together make him the largest single shareholder in Moncler.
  • Institutional investors (big funds, asset managers, etc.) collectively hold the majority of Moncler’s shares.
  • Other notable shareholders include the Rivetti family and Singapore’s state investor Temasek, each with a mid‑single‑digit percentage stake.
  • LVMH does not own Moncler, but it has a strategic minority investment in Double R (Ruffini’s vehicle), giving it indirect exposure and the right to appoint a board member.

Short timeline context

  • 1952: Moncler is founded in France by RenĂ© Ramillon and AndrĂ© Vincent.
  • 1990s: Ownership passes through various investors and shifts to Italy.
  • 2003: Remo Ruffini acquires a controlling stake and begins repositioning Moncler as a high‑end luxury outerwear brand.
  • 2013: Moncler goes public in Milan; ownership spreads across institutional and retail investors, but Ruffini remains the anchor shareholder.
  • 2020–2024: Moncler acquires Stone Island and adjusts its shareholder base; Rivetti and Temasek end up as direct shareholders.
  • Mid‑2020s: Ruffini still dominates the shareholder register, even as his role evolves at the executive level.

Who owns what (high level)

Holder Role / Nature What they own (approx., conceptually)
Remo Ruffini (via Double R / Ruffini Partecipazioni) Main shareholder, long‑time leader of Moncler Largest individual stake in Moncler’s share capital, giving him effective control and major influence on strategy
Institutional investors Funds, asset managers, long‑only investors Collectively the majority of Moncler’s free‑float shares
Rivetti family Italian investor family linked to Stone Island deal A direct minority stake (low‑single‑digit percentage of Moncler)
Temasek Singapore sovereign investor A direct minority stake in Moncler, also low‑single‑digit percentage
LVMH (via stake in Double R) Strategic luxury partner Indirect stake in Moncler through investment in Ruffini’s holding company and a board seat right
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Forum / “trending topic” angle

On finance and fashion forums, the recurring clarification is that “Moncler is not owned by LVMH,” even though LVMH has a strategic link via Double R and a board presence. People also often mention that if you buy Moncler stock today, you are joining a shareholder base dominated by institutions, but still very much aligned around Ruffini’s vision for the brand.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.