The Journal. - The Case of the Missing $15 Billion Fortune: Part 1
Episode Date: November 25, 2025Hermès is one of Europe’s most storied luxury brands, known for its Birkin bags and expensive silk scarves. One of the company’s biggest shareholders had been fifth-generation Hermès heir Nicola...s Puech. But a few years ago, Puech made a shocking admission: he was out of money. And Puech’s Hermès shares, worth some $15 billion, were missing. In this first episode, WSJ’s Nick Kostov digs into one of the most baffling and epic financial sagas of this century. Jessica Mendoza hosts. Further Listening: The World's Richest Person Is Planning for Succession Are Diamonds Even a Luxury Anymore? How a Miami Couple Used Empty Mansions to Pocket Millions Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Our colleague Nick Kostov covers European luxury brands.
Nice beat if you can get it.
In a while back, he took one of the most beautiful road trips you can imagine,
through the Swiss Alps to a small village called Ferre.
Yeah, so Ferre is a tiny hamlet.
There's maybe 12 houses.
How I got there was I got a train.
from Paris to Geneva, and then I drove through the Alps.
Really, really beautiful drive.
And then you leave kind of the last town,
drive another three kilometers,
and then you get to Ferre.
So it's very, very remote.
It's incredibly beautiful.
I can't overstate how beautiful the views are from Ferret.
But Nick wasn't there to sightsee.
I was there to find a guy called Nicola Puech,
who is a fifth-generation heir to the Hermes fortune.
Nicola Poesch is the great-great-grandson of Therie Hermes,
the founder of the French luxury goods company.
For years, Poesh was Hermes' biggest shareholder
and one of the richest men in Europe.
And then, two years ago, Poesh made a jaw-dropping claim.
He was out of money, broke, skint.
As for his Hermes shares, shares which today would be worth about $15 billion, he claimed he didn't own them anymore, and he didn't know who did.
The shares were, quite simply, gone.
What was your reaction when you first heard that this multi-billion dollar fortune had gone missing?
I mean, I think like...
WTF?
Yeah, WTF, exactly, exactly, WTF.
Like, my first reaction was, I better look into this.
Nick's been looking into it for over a year now,
trying to figure out what happened to Nicola Pesha's lost fortune.
The search has taken him deep into the rarefied world of Europe's super rich.
And the story he's uncovered involves a beloved handyman,
a trusted financial advisor,
and one of the biggest corporate rivalries in luxury.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Jessica Mendoza. It's Tuesday, November 25th.
Over the next two episodes, we're going to tell you the story of Hermes-Air Nicola Puech's missing billions.
And what became of them.
This is part one.
This episode is brought to you by Fidelity.
You check how well something performs before you buy it.
Why should investing be any different?
Fidelity gets that performance matters most.
With sound financial advice and quality investment products,
they're here to help accelerate your dreams.
Chat with your advisor or visit Fidelity.ca.
Performance to learn more.
Commissions, fees, and expenses may apply.
POS prospectus before investing funds in ETFs are not guaranteed.
Their values change and past performance may not be repeated.
At Desjardin, we speak business.
We speak equipment modernization.
We're fluent in data digitization and expansion into foreign markets.
And we can talk all day about streamlining manufacturing processes.
Because at Desjardin business, we speak the same language you do.
Business.
So join the more than 400,000 Canadian entrepreneurs who already count on us
and contact Desjardin.
Today, we'd love to talk, business.
What do you think of when you hear Hermes?
I think of the absolute pinnacle of luxury.
Hermes is, for many people, the ultimate status symbol.
I think of burking bags.
It has since become one of the world's most exclusive and expensive.
fashion accessories.
Kelly bags, silk scarfs.
Elegant scarves, ties, and handbags, all meticulously made.
It is, you know, top-top-tier luxury.
But here's something you might not think of.
Hermes is one of the top five biggest companies in Europe by market cap.
It's bigger than the industrial giant Siemens.
Bigger than banks like Santander and Deutsche Bank.
Bigger than Airbus and Spotify and Novo Nordisk.
That's right, handbags are bigger than Ozempic.
And this has all been a huge boon for Hermes' heirs.
Given the company's been around for 188 years, there are a lot of them.
There are now more than 200 heirs to Hermes.
So the family has split into three branches, the Girons, Dumas, and the Puech.
Of those heirs, one of the most notable was Nicola Puech.
he would end up holding about 6% of the entire company,
6 million shares of Hermes.
Nicola Puech became the largest individual shareholder in Hermes
because he inherited shares, first of all, from his mother,
and then he inherited an extra 1% from his sister.
And so he ends up with this enormous fortune.
Puech himself, how to describe him.
I mean, early in his career, he did various things.
He worked for an ad agency.
He started a couture house with a stylist that went bust pretty quickly.
He had a short stint as a water skiing instructor.
Okay, why not?
Why not?
Yeah, exactly.
And then from the mid-90s or so, he has lived entirely off Hermes' dividends.
With those dividends, Puech built a comfortable life.
He spent most of the 1980s on a farm he owns in Spain, tending to his horses.
One of the only photos we have of Puech shows a heavyset man with snow-white hair,
holding a beautiful white horse by a lead.
In the early 2000s, Puech began spending more time in Switzerland,
renovating a massive chalet in Féreté.
And that's really how he spent his days.
Puech is 82 now.
He never married and doesn't have any children.
So there would be no one to inherit his most.
multi-billion-dollar fortune.
Instead, Puech made plans to leave it to a foundation he set up.
He'd hired some people to build it up, and when you consider that the foundation was expecting
a gift worth some $15 billion, you know, they were really building this thing out, expecting
to have an enormous amount of money to spend.
It seemed like Puech's future was settled.
And then came a series of seemingly sudden moves, clues that not all was right with the
as air.
One clue came in the form of a letter.
In 2023, Puesch wrote to the head of his foundation.
At the top of the letter, he wrote, in French,
cancellation inheritance agreement.
He sends a letter basically saying,
listen, I've decided not to leave my fortune to you
for various reasons, including the fact that I thought you guys could protect my
fortune, but actually you can't.
So no more money for you.
The head of the foundation was shocked.
He hadn't seen it coming, and he wasn't the only one to be summarily written off like this.
A year earlier, Puech had sent another letter, seemingly out of the blue.
He addressed it to his financial advisor.
It's a guy called Eric Fremont.
Eric Fremont had total power over Puech's finances for many, many years, 25 years.
Fremont served Switzerland's elite and was close to the Armes family.
He'd managed Precious financial.
life for decades, and Puech
considered him a friend. But
in this letter, Puech fired
Fremont with no explanation.
The Fremont letter basically says
thank you for your service,
but I don't, you know,
goodbye. Goodbye. Yeah, exactly. Next.
Firing your longtime
financial advisor, pulling
out of your own foundation.
These were surprising moves.
But to Nick, they were less
surprising in light of a rumor that had started
going around, that Puesch was claiming to have lost his entire fortune.
Last year, Nick wrangled an interview with that fired financial advisor, Eric Fremont.
Nick wanted to get Fremont's perspective on what might be going on with the Hermes Air.
Yeah, so this was a meeting that took place.
We were in a hotel near Geneva Airport.
So we were, you know, in a kind of quiet spot of a hotel lobby.
The man who walked in was about Pesha's age, thin, with white floppy hair and dark caterpillar eyebrows.
Fremont is an interesting character, so, I mean, he's obviously a very smartly dressed, he comes in, he's got neatly combed hair, nice suit.
He doesn't have a particular aura. He's not particularly charismatic. He gives off, he really gives off an air of fragility that is almost disarming.
But sensitive, like sensitive, fragile.
That was my impression of Eric Fremont.
And Fremont had a wild story to tell about his former employer.
I've told you that Puech isn't married and doesn't have children.
But he didn't live alone.
What he did have was a handyman and his handyman's wife and their children.
Puech had grown exceptionally close to his living handyman,
a guy named Jadiel Boutraq.
and his wife Maria Paz.
And according to Fremont,
the two were key to understanding
what was going on with the Hermes heir.
Which, Fremont said,
was this.
The Hermes' shares weren't actually missing.
Puech was lying.
He still had the shares,
and he was scheming to leave them to his handyman.
So Fremont's story was that
Pemont's wants to leave his fortune
to his handyman slash gardener.
The problem is,
is that he has agreed to leave it to his foundation.
And legally, in Switzerland, once you agree to leave your fortune, for example, to a foundation,
you can't go back on that unless it's to give it, for example, to a child or somebody you're related to.
Puesch's solution to this problem, according to Fremont,
was to try to formally adopt his handyman as his son.
In Fremont's telling, this adoption would be the culmination of years of,
manipulation by the handyman and his wife.
He says that they have a hold over Puech, that Puech is a vulnerable old man, that he was
isolated by COVID, and that these guys, the handyman slash Gardner and his wife has got
their claws into him and are basically manipulating him to leave his fortune to them.
That was his story.
Fremont didn't just make his case to Nick.
He filed a report to a Swiss welfare agency
claiming that the handyman and his wife
were taking advantage of Puech.
He said Puech had gifted the couple
multiple properties, including a home in Switzerland.
Puech's lawyer called the allegations absurd,
adding that the gifted properties
would still only constitute about 1% of Puech's fortune.
The report was ultimately dismissed.
Nick had heard Fremont's version of events,
but what about Puech's?
What was his side of the story?
After the break, Nick tracks down the Hermes Air.
Black Friday is here at IKEA,
and the clock is ticking on savings you won't want to miss.
Join IKEA family for free today
and unlock deals on everything from holiday must-haves
to cozy at-home essentials,
all the little and big things you need to make this season
But don't wait, like leftovers at midnight, our Black Friday offers won't last.
Shop now at IKEA.ca.ca slash Black Friday.
IKEA, bring home to life.
Nick drove for hours through the Swiss Alps to the tiny hamlet of Ferry
because he wanted to know what Nicola Puech made of all of this.
What did the Hermes Air think had happened to his $15 billion dollar
fortune. It turned out, Puech wasn't hard to find.
It's pretty obvious which one of his houses, because it's absolutely huge, and all the other
houses are normal size. And so I walked up to the door, as I knocked on the door, he came
round the side of the house, and he was leaving to get in a car with a woman.
Hello, Mr. Puech.
Hello.
I was going to write an article on Mr. Puech.
Ah, well.
I asked if you had 30 seconds to me accorded.
No, thank you.
Well, it's not the good mom, no.
So you don't have a lot of time.
He's clearly leaving.
What did you ask him?
I mean, my first question, to be honest, was, did you have a nice summer?
Passing a bonneté.
Which was not what I'd driven, like, eight or nine hours for.
But I figured maybe if I just get him talking, you know, maybe he'll become chatty.
I think, did you have a nice summer?
He said, yes, and carried on walking.
So I think it was in French, I said, where are these actions, or something like that.
But basically meaning like, where are these shares?
Yeah, where are the shares, Mr. Puech?
And unsurprisingly, he didn't answer me.
Madam, Mr. Puech?
Nick never got a real interview with Puech.
Puech's lawyer called the whole thing a, quote, murky affair
and declined to comment in depth.
But Nick was able to get a picture of Puech's thinking
from lawsuits the air filed over the years.
and from conversations with people close to him.
Here's what Nick gathered.
According to Pouche, the whole thing likely started decades ago,
back in the early 2000s,
when Rames found itself in a knockdown fight
with another big name in luxury,
a company called LVMH.
Talk to me about LVMH.
So LVMH is the world's biggest luxury company.
It's a conglomeration of about 75 browns.
brands that go from Dior to Louis Vuitton to Celine to Tag Hoyer to Moet to Hennessy.
I mean, walk down Fifth Avenue in New York or Rodeo Drive or Montessando in Japan or Hong Kong or whatever,
a lot of these stores will be owned by LVMH.
LVMH's name is itself a mashup of various luxury brands, Louis Vuitton, Mouette, Hennessy.
And at the very top of this many-headed luxury hydra
is one of the richest men in the world, Bernard Arnaud.
He has many nicknames, the Lord of Logos, the Pope of Fashion,
the one he hates the most is the wolf in Kashmir,
and Arnaud is a capitalist.
You know, he was schooled in American capitalism, in New York, in the 80s,
and he would go and acquire brands from families.
Over the years, Arnaud built LVMH up from a handful of brands
into a juggernaut with about 75 different labels.
I think some families who want to sell their brands
see him as a safe pair of hands.
He's very good at developing brands, making them bigger.
He's got amazing attention to detail.
But he's also very tough.
And if he wants a brand, he will try and acquire it.
And back in 2001, the brand Arnaud was interested in was Hermes.
Arnault wanted to build a sizable stake in the company.
Because Hermes is still largely owned by descendants like Puech,
this would mean buying up shares from individual members of the Hermes family.
And so LVMH reached out to someone with close ties to the Armes clan,
someone they thought could help.
That person was Nicola Puech's financial advisor, Eric Fremont.
So according to Fremont,
someone in touch or working with Elvier,
MH reached out to him and essentially said, would you be willing to help us build up a stake,
an investment in Hermes?
And Fremont says, sure.
Fremont detailed his work with LVMH in a legal claim he later made against Arnaud and the company.
He says he worked for years, building up Arnaud's Hermes' steak.
This was a delicate operation.
Sure, some Remez family members might be willing to sell some stock and cash out.
But Hermes, the company, most definitely did not want its biggest rival becoming its biggest shareholder.
To avoid triggering alarm bells at Hermes, the share-buying scheme would have to be kept a secret.
And it worked. With Framont's help, LVMH built its Hermes' stake to 14%.
Hermes was none the wiser.
Until 2010, when Arnaud finally revealed his secret stake.
He decides, okay, I'm going to pull the trigger, and he announces to the market.
unbeknownst to Hermes that he has a 14% stake,
which is going to rise to 17% in the coming days.
And so Hermes is stunned.
Yeah, they're all like, wait a minute, when did this happen?
Yeah, wait a minute, when did this take place?
And obviously he's been working on it for a decade.
And so the question at this point is, where has he got this 17%?
To build a 17% stake, Hermes knew that Arnaud must have bought shares from Hermes family members.
It was the only way.
So, who had sold?
Many Angry Fingers pointed at one of the company's biggest shareholders, Nicola Puech.
But Puech denied it.
He said he hadn't sold any of his inherited shares to Arnaud.
I still have my 6%.
So he's like, it's not me.
Yeah, he's like, it's not me.
And Puesch's belief is, and he's asked about this by investigators for the French stock market authorities and others,
he's saying I still have my 6%.
So it must be somebody else, basically, is what they're thinking.
It must be somebody else, although at this point, a lot of people are, let's say, suspicious.
Why was this a mystery?
Like, don't companies usually just know who their biggest shareholders are?
Can you just check who owns the shares?
I mean, usually yes, but Puech owned bearer shares.
Bearer shares are kind of like cash in a way.
They're not registered.
Unlike normal shares, bearer shares don't need to be registered to a specific person or business.
They're owned by whoever physically holds or bears the piece of paper, thus the name.
And like cash, they're more anonymous.
People close to LVMH say not even the company knew for sure whose shares they'd bought.
The finger-pointing went on for years.
Hermes, and many members of Puech's family, believed he'd sold them out.
Puech denied it, over and over again.
And then, in 2023, Nicola Puech filed a series of
lawsuits against Eric Fraymond in Switzerland and in France.
The contents were explosive.
In the lawsuits, Puech accused his former financial advisor of massive fraud.
He said his money was gone.
His Hermes' shares, gone.
As for what had happened to them, Puech said he now suspected that Fremont had sold them
years ago, and the most likely buyer was LVMH.
So he's saying that Fremont sold his shares without his permission, essentially.
Yeah, exactly.
So he's basically saying Fremont has stolen everything I have.
And as part of the lawsuits, he lists a number of people who he believes that investigators should question.
One of them is, of course, Bernard Arnaud, and their LVMH.
And he says, you know, if these guys should be questioned, their offices should be searched, their homes should be searched to see if they know anything about where my shares have ended up.
Right, did my shares actually wind up at LVMH?
Did my shares wind up at LVMH?
Exactly, exactly.
A spokesperson for Arnaud and LVMH declined to comment.
Nick spoke with Fremont, the former financial advisor, twice last year,
once at that hotel in Geneva and a second time in Paris.
He asked Fremont about Puech's allegation.
How did Fremont respond to the allegation?
that he stole the shares?
So he strongly disputed that allegation.
He was, I would say, almost incensed.
He certainly said he felt incredibly betrayed,
that this was completely unfair,
and that he had worked diligently and honestly
for Puech for 25 years,
and that his allegations were completely crazy.
Accusations were flying.
But who to believe?
Was it the handyman?
Fraymond, Pouche himself?
And then, one day this past summer, Nick got a text from a source.
Eric Fraymond was dead.
Tomorrow on the journal.
Finally, some answers.
Have you solved the mystery?
I'm further along than I was.
Yes, I think I know what happened to the shares, yes.
And no, it wasn't the handyman.
That's all for today, Tuesday, November 25th.
The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
If you like our show, follow us on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're out every weekday afternoon.
Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.
