Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
BEIJING, April 11 (Xinhua) -- While the developed
world tighten their belts and focus spending on daily necessities, the big
luxury companies are looking to China's new rich to buy their jewelry, clothes
and bags.
"There is no doubt that luxury brands will come to
China and grab a piece of the huge potential market," says Guo Zuli, director of
the World Luxury Research Center, which operates luxury goods website
www.luxee.com.
The Chinese market shows remarkable resilience in the
financial crisis because it has an increasing number of people able and willing
to buy luxury goods, says Guo.
"Unlike the mature traditional markets, demand in
China is far from saturated either materially or psychologically."
The high-end market, which was once believed to be
immune from economic downturn, has seen weakening sales growth or even declines
in the traditional markets of the United States, Europe and Japan, analysts say.
A study by the Bain & Company consultants in
October predicted global luxury goods sales growth would slow sharply to 3
percent to hit 175 billion euros (220 billion dollars) in 2008. The slower
growth rate stood in sharp contrast with 6.5 percent in 2007 and 9percent growth
in 2006.
The study also forecast the luxury sector would face
its first recession in six years in 2009, with sales declining by up to 7
percent.
A report from Deutsche Bank says the market will
contract 5 to 10 percent in 2009.
However, experts say the Chinese luxury goods market
remains resilient.
China's impressive economic growth and rising number
of new rich have drawn many luxury companies, says Huang Siwei, director of the
www.neeu.com website, a Beijing-based luxury and lifestyle portal.
An estimated 415,000 Chinese had more than 1 million
U.S. dollars in disposable assets in 2007, more than any other country,
according to the Merrill-Lynch Asia-Pacific Wealth Report released in September.
A Gucci spokesman said in an e-mail to Xinhua that
China represented one of the most dynamic areas of retail growth for the firm,
with 2008 sales growth in the mainland at 42 percent. The global profit for the
company edged up 0.2 percent from a year ago.
Gucci had 25 stores in 17 Chinese cities as of
January, when it opened three new stores. It is looking to open its Shanghai
flagship store in May.
LVMH claims business profit was up 2.1 percent from a
year earlier to 3.63 billion euros in 2008, but sales in the United States fell
4.03 percent and in Japan 5.16 percent last year. However, the group stressed in
its annual report that performance in China was "solid" and strong.
Cartier, the French jeweler and watchmaker, is
planning more stores in first and second-tier Chinese cities after posting
double-digit growth in 2008.
Yan Jun, managing director of Beijing-based Ecole
Fashion & Luxury Consulting Ltd., says the expanding middle class
constitutes an important group of consumers who desire and can afford luxury
goods.
"Aged between 25 and 40 and living in developed
regions, they are fashionable, mature, and passionate about lifestyle and
quality," he says.
Up to 170 million people, or 13 percent of the
population, can afford luxury brands and the number will reach 250 million next
year, according to the China Association of Branding Strategy.
The government aims to build "a well-off society" by
2020, with per capita GDP of 3,000 U.S. dollars. Developed regions, such as
Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Suzhou and Wenzhou, with a total
population of more than 300 million, will see per capita GDP exceed 15,000 U.S.
dollars.
Bain & Company predicted the Chinese luxury
market would see growth of 20 to 35 percent in the next five years. The Ministry
of Commerce says China will become the world's largest luxury market by 2014,
accounting for 23 percent of global business.
"It is almost certain that China has surpassed the
United States to become the second largest luxury market after Japan. There is
still a lot of room for development," says Yan Jun.
He believes the huge potential will definitely
attract more brands.
"I am going to Italy to give a lecture about luxury
management in China this June. I have been told a lot of executives of luxury
companies will attend and they are eager to know more about the Chinese market
and how to enter the market," says Yan.
"The Chinese market is so desirable that
international luxury companies are speeding up their quest for a share."
