China luxury goods buyers losing appetite
new
Feb. 26, 2013, 8:39 p.m. EST
By Qu Yunxu
BEIJING (Caixin Online) —
Imagine a luxury goods shopper so confident and flush with cash that one
day he walks into a Shanghai handbag shop, flashes 300,000 yuan
($48,077), and waltzes out with almost every bag in stock.
That’s what happened last year at a Prada
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store where Benny Lu worked as a clerk. The customer “entered the shop
and pointed to the shelves,” he recalls. “Then he said, ‘Except this one
and that one, pack all the others.’”
This kind of price-is-no-object customer, however, is becoming
increasingly rare at luxury retailers in Shanghai and across China.
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Caixin is a Beijing-based media group dedicated to providing high-quality and authoritative financial and business news and information through periodicals, online and TV/video programs.
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Sales of high-end jewelry, watches and handbags have been slowing
lately, some five years after the world’s luxury goods makers embraced
wealthy Chinese consumers as important drivers for global business
growth.
Market analyst Bain & Co. said luxury consumer product sales on the mainland rose to 260 billion yuan
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in 2011 from 140 billion yuan in 2008.
Those heady days were marked by a dramatic 12% increase in upscale sales
between 2008 and 2009 and a 30% jump between 2010 and 2011, Bain said,
even while the rest of the world struggled through the global financial
crisis.
The growth momentum first showed signs of weakening in October 2011,
said Cliff Xie, a veteran who has worked for many years in China’s
luxury market. “It started with jewelry and luxury watches,” he said.
A Prada outlet in Dalian, China.
And the slowdown could get worse in the wake of a July decision by the
State Council aimed at fighting official corruption. The council imposed
a new regulation, in effect since October, that bans luxury good
purchases by all government agencies nationwide.
In the past, officials had routinely tapped public treasuries for money
to buy all sorts of bejeweled and leather gifts for various associates
in exchange for favors.
Now that the practice is banned, said Bain partner Bruno Lannes, sales
of many kinds of high-end jewelry, watches, handbags and briefcases in
China have fallen.
Chow Tai Fook Jewellery
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, the world’s largest retail jeweler, said its same-store sales on the
mainland declined 8% year-on-year in the fourth quarter 2012. Mainland
sales account for 80% of the company’s revenue.
Italian fashion house Gucci
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saw sales grow 2% during the first three quarters of 2012 in the
Asia-Pacific region, compared to 7% globally. French luxury giant LVMH
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reported a slight decline in first-half 2012 sales in China, while the company’s other market areas reported growth.
Kent Wong, Chow Tai Fook’s managing director, blamed falling investment
on the mainland for the decline in jewelry sales. Changing market
conditions, he said, had forced the company to start focusing on low-end
jewelry for younger customers.
Strategic shift
Chow Tai Fook’s decision to adjust its business mirrors a wider search
for new sales strategies among luxury-goods makers catering to rich
Chinese.
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For example, Lannes said, some companies are promoting obscure and niche
brands of high-end products that lack the splashy labels of well-known
brands such as LVMH, Hermes
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and Gucci. Famous brands “with eye-catching logos” have for years been
“the most popular gifts,” said Lannes, but that’s changing.
Company financial reports support Lannes’ point. French fashion group
Pinault-Printemps-Redoute posted a mere 2% increase in last fiscal sales
for its Gucci brand in the Asia-Pacific region. But the company’s niche
brand Bottega Veneta saw sales jump 25%.
More adjustments are expected in the changing political environment,
said Ren Guoqiang, a vice president for the consulting firm Roland
Berger & Partner.
“The Chinese luxury market for a long time underwent abnormal growth
supported by tax policies and gift consumption,” Ren said. “But recent
anti-corruption measures and a subsequent (sales) slowdown will help the
market return to a normal development pace.”
Gift-buyers are believed to account for up to 25% of all luxury product
sales in China — a phenomenon that luxury retailers understand well and
sometimes encourage through flexible invoicing.
A manager for a luxury brand watch retailer told Caixin at his company
“there are flexibilities granted to stores for invoice titles and
contents.”
Many stores offer after-sales services to customers who can’t provide
invoice. “A customer came in with a suit and asked to exchange it for a
woman’s handbag because the size was wrong,” said a clerk at a luxury
fashionwear store. “It obviously had been an unsuitable gift.”
Sometimes intermediaries are hired to buy goods at stores for
gift-giving officials. Several government agencies in southern China,
for example, hired a man surnamed Xia to purchase luxury products.
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Xia told Caixin he once purchased 100 men’s suits for government
officials. The most expensive cost 110,000 yuan. As part of the deal,
Xia collected “suitable” invoices worth several million yuan that could
mask the officials’ spending spree and meet procurement rules.
The watch company manager said intermediaries are often hired by customers, who don’t want anyone to know what they’re buying.
Lu said the man who paid 300,000 yuan for 30 handbags in Shanghai was
probably buying gifts, as had many other customers before. She remembers
being asked for invoices that inaccurately identified purchased goods
as “office supplies.”
Such demands gave Lu and her colleagues headaches because “according to
the rules, shops can only offer an invoice that identifies exactly
what’s purchased.”
“I had some customers who decided not to buy products they had selected
simply because they weren’t satisfied with the invoice,” Lu said.
Luxury sales in China typically climb to an annual high during the weeks
before the National People’s Congress, which is usually held every
March, and spike again ahead of other annual meetings called by the
Communist Party and central government.
Still in business
Despite the changing environment on the mainland, luxury goods suppliers
still count on Chinese consumers as a major force behind global sales.
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For example, according to the auditing firm KPMG, luxury purchases
account for 71% of all spending done by Chinese tourists when they
travel overseas.
The Swiss shopping tourism company Global Blue says Chinese consumers
traveling worldwide spent 2.1 billion euros ($2.75 billion)
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at duty-free shops in 2012, up 68% from their 2011 duty-free spending pace.
An outlet store manager in Florence, Italy, said Chinese tourists and
hired buyers have been contributing to the fast growth in sales of
luxury products destined for consumers in China. These buyers include
students and Chinese expatriates who help mainland customers buy
overseas.
A Chinese lady living in the U.S., He Xiaying, makes a living by buying
goods in the United States and shipping them to customers on the
mainland. “This kind of business is costless,” she said. “We get an
order and go to the shopping mall. Then we can send it out.”
China’s domestic market accounts for about 7% of world luxury sales,
said Lannes, but Chinese while at home or when traveling abroad deserve
credit for buying 25% of the world’s luxury consumer products.
“Overseas purchases by Chinese people greatly exceed their domestic
purchases,” said Lannes. Indeed, he said, Chinese consumers are major
luxury buyers in the United States and Europe.
“From London to New York to Milan, you can find clerks specially assigned to care for Chinese customers,” said Lannes.
Meanwhile, on the mainland, an increasing number of luxury retailers
have been expanding their presence beyond first-tier cities by opening
shops in smaller cities. A common goal is deeper penetration of the
Chinese market.
Indeed, fast growth for domestic sales between 2009 and 2011 encouraged
luxury brand retailers to open more stores nationwide. According to
Bain, 15 luxury retailers opened 80 stores in China during the first
eight months of 2010.
The pace of store openings was “even faster than what they did in Japan
several years ago,” said Thomas, an employee of a big-name fashion
company. “Everyone has been competing for market share.”
To keep the ball rolling, some industry insiders have called for the
Chinese government to reduce taxes on retail luxury products.
High taxes have been blamed for encouraging consumers to buy overseas.
Ren said luxury goods are usually subject to a 17% consumption tax and a
value-added tax that can be as high as 45%. Luxury taxes in other
countries are typically about 5%, he said.
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A Bain report said a luxury watch in China can cost 40% more than the
same watch bought overseas. And a handbag made by the U.S. company Coach
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can cost 30% more in China than in the United States.
But no one expects Beijing to change the tax regime anytime soon. One
reason given is that foreign luxury brand companies directly operate
their stores and sales networks in China without Chinese partners,
giving them little incentive to push forward tax cuts.
And the minor role that domestic companies managed to play in
foreign-owned luxury retailing has been further cut since 2010, the year
luxury goods companies increased their control of sales networks.
But Ren thinks these domestic stores will be affected as more Chinese
consumers shop overseas. “The pace of new store openings in China will
slow down, or even stop,” he said.
Lannes said some luxury companies have tried narrowing the gap between
prices for their products in China and other countries by raising
overseas prices.
The watch company manager told Caixin his firm tried to boost mainland
sales by increasing prices in Hong Kong, which is a popular destination
for shopping tourists from the mainland. But such efforts have had a
limited impact on buyer habits and company revenues.
“No matter where a customer goes, all purchases will be included in a company’s revenues,” said Thomas.
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