The animal rights pressure group PETA has purchased shares  the French luxury goods company Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy (LVMH). PETA (People  the Ethical Treatment  Animals) bought the shares  order to pressure LVMH to stop selling bags and other products made  exotic animal skins, such as crocodile. PETA has not disclosed what its shareholding is, although there are rumours that it has bought just a single share. Even this stake  LVMH will mean PETA is eligible to attend shareholder meetings. PETA will also exercise its option to question the LVMH board members  front  other shareholders to make sure its agenda to protect animals is heard and addressed.
The main reason  PETA's share purchase is to bring LVMH to account regarding the treatment  crocodiles. PETA said: "In the wake  an exposé revealing that reptiles  crocodile farms  Vietnam (including two that have supplied skins to a tannery owned  Louis Vuitton's parent company, LVMH) are confined to tiny pits and sometimes hacked  while they're still alive and thrashing, PETA has become a shareholder of LVMH…to put pressure  the company to stop selling exotic skins merchandise." An LVMH spokeswoman replied: "We have no knowledge  ... any cruel method involving the suffering  the animal. [This] is in clear contradiction  our principles and rules."