Burberry leads the top 10 at 0.97, but the more revealing structural fact is that Louis Vuitton International's nearest audiences split cleanly across two clusters: luxury and premium apparel on one side, and upscale hospitality on the other.
The apparel cluster is tight. Burberry (0.97), Gucci (0.95), Dior (0.95), and Saint Laurent (0.94) occupy the top four positions — all Apparel category neighbors, spanning General and Womens Apparel subcategories. The North Face (0.92) extends the apparel cluster into Outdoor and Athletic Apparel, and Tiffany & Co. (0.90) adds a Jewelry and Accessories node. That's six of the top ten from Apparel alone.
The second peak is hospitality. Luxury Hotels (0.92), Westin Hotels & Resorts (0.91), and Autograph Collection Hotels (0.90) all land within a narrow band, joined by Ruth's Chris Steak House (0.92) from Casual Dining — the one outlier in the set that doesn't fit neatly into either cluster. No other category appears in the top 10; the neighbor set is entirely Apparel and Hospitality & Lodging, with that single restaurant entry.
The two-peak shape here reflects an audience that moves fluidly between high-end fashion and premium travel — two distinct consumption contexts that nonetheless share the same underlying audience composition.