GREEN PEBBLES

GREEN PEBBLES

A Passion for luxury, fashion & watches

NET-A-PORTER GROUP ACQUIRES CHINESE SHOUKE.COM!

Red Luxury reported today that the Net-A-Porter Group has acquired the Chinese discounted, members' only luxury e-tailer Shouke.com 

 

Image via Red Luxury

 

Shouke.com will be relaunched as Theoutnet.cn which will offer products by international designers at discounts of up to 80% to consumers.

 

Image via Red Luxury

 

It is expected that the Theoutnet.cn will open in 2013 serving the Asia-Pacific region offering same-day delivery to its Hong Kong clients and 24hour delivery to other clients globally!

 

 

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MARKETING IN CHINA - THE WINNERS & THE LOSERS!

 

Red Luxury's latest report from China highlights the extreme difficulties faced by Western companies when they enter the Chinese market.

 

As market research company Access Asia's founder  Paul French points out " For Chinese consumers, Confucian group-think is important and at the moment they are still buying status to show that they have achieved things".  Or as Red Luxury put it:

 

"In China, the only thing that may be more important than being rich is looking rich"

 

Indeed according to Red Luxury there are infact 2 Chinas, and most Chinese feel the desperate urge to distinguish themseves from the majority of the country's population which still lives in great poverty.  This is particularly the case with the middle class which finds itself stuck between the two extremes desperately trying to achieve the higher status while at the same time doing all that it can to distinguish itself from the poorer classes.  

 

For those Chinese who left the poorer rural areas to move to the Cities in search of fortune what they buy will be an indication to those who stayed behind that they've achieved a certain status.

 

It is with this in mind that one can understand why certain companies have flourished in China and others are pretty much doomed to failure particularly in the short term.

 

For example high end lingerie companies such as Agent Provocateur and La Perla have failed to succeed in China, the main reason being that most Chinese women see no reason why they should spend what they view as a small fortune on something that only their husband will see!

 

As much as their need to 'show off their new found status' is paramount, so is their need to feel part of a group and not stand out like a sore thumb.  For example they are not keen for Versace which for them is too 'bling' and in your face or as French put it " No one wants to look like Elton John'.  The opposite of their nouveau riche counterparts in Russia! Indeed companies such as Zara and H&M who have made their fortune in the West satisfying their client's need for 'individualism' have had to customize their collections and marketing startegies and are now selling copious amounts of black and white basics!

 

That said however, a certain group of the Chinese nouveau riche, particularly the younger ones, have started to 'discriminate' between luxury brands.  Indeed Louis Vuitton, the number one luxury goods seller in China according to Heron research group,  is now starting to be viewed as too brash, the kind of thing a 'coal mine owner' would buy - as Red Luxury put it. 

 

As with their Western counterparts the Chinese are starting to differentiate between 'rich' and 'rich', coming all the more closer to becoming the new luxury consumer described by Antoine Arnault who no longer wants the 'bling' and prefers to invest in 'heritage, carftsmanship and durability' showing a more sophisticated taste and different understanding of luxury.

 

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SURPRISE SURPRISE HERMES VUITTON AND CARTIER ARE FAVOURED GIFTS IN CHINA

Louis Vuitton A/W 2011/2012

Image via Red Luxury

 

According to Rupert Hoogewerf, Chairman and Chief Researcher of Hurun Report 

 

“Gift-giving is an essential part of Chinese culture. The money spent on gifting, especially at Chinese New Year, is staggering compared with the West.”

 

One should not be surprised therefore that as Red Luxury reports, the top gifts favoured by Chinese luxury consumers in 2012 according to a survey of 503 Chinese millionaires consist mostly of global name brands, particularly French brands.

 

Guan Hongsheng, who owns a trading company in Wenzhou says

“What I want is a brand that is widely recognized. Domestic brands are still not well-known enough for my friends. I prefer the latest items that cost more than 10,000 yuan each,”

 

Mr. Hongsheng spent more than 1 million yuan in business-related gifts that included more than 40 iPhones, seven iPad 2s, Macbooks and items from Cartier, Hermes and Montblanc.

 

A typical wealthy mainland Chinese included in the survey of which 3 out of 5 were male,  average age was 41 with a personal wealth of Renminbi 10 million or more (equivalent to USD 1.6 million / Euro 1.2 million / GBP 1 million)  “has two private bank accounts, 4.2 watches and three cars. They travel eight days a month for work. They go abroad three times and spend 20 days for leisure in a year.”

 

Top 10 Gifts for the Chinese Luxury Consumer 2012

Rank Brand % of Respondents Sector Country of Origin
1 Louis Vuitton 14.9% Fashion France
2 Cartier 10.3% Jewelry, Watches France
3 Hermes 8.0% Fashion France
4 Chanel 6.2% Fashion, Perfumes France
5 Moutai 5.9% Drinks China
6 Apple 5.7% Consumer Electronics US
7 Dior 4.6% Fashion France
8 Prada 3.9% Fashion Italy
9 Rolex 3.6% Watches Switzerland
10 Armani 3.4% Fashion Italy

Source: Hurun Best of the Best Awards Survey 2012

 

GOD SAVE THE ....CHINESE!

At least that's what London's luxury retailers must be thinking.

 

Harvey Nichols Department Store London.  Image via Harvey Nichols

 

 

According to a report published in Red Luxury many retailers were very worried about Christmas sales this year but London stores such as Harvey Nichols, Harrods and Selfridges have reported boosts in sales which they attribute to Chinese tourists.

 

Harvey Nichols reported post tax annual profits at the London store up 32% compared to last year's figures, whilst Burberry's CEO Angela Ahrendts was reported as saying by the Financial Times  and the Telegraph that:

 

“When Chinese consumers travel, they spend six times more than when they stay at home.  Saying ‘I bought this in London’ adds further cachet.” 

 

On a slightly negative note for London, despite a significant increase of Chinese visitors to the city, according to Global Blue Paris is still the number one holiday destination for Chinese travellers, while London comes in second.  

 

CHINESE DESIGNERS MOVING WEST

After the sheer invasion of China by luxury and fashion companies of such as Vuitton, Prada etc, Chinese designers and brands are now heading west to show off their designs.  Should their European counterparts be worried?  Possibly.  

 

(Image via Red Luxury)

 

 

Just as Western luxury brands colonize China, it is inevitable that Chinese companies will want to do the same right back. Big ambitions – and big payrolls – amid Chinese designers and entrepreneurs mean that some of the country’s brands are already making bids at international status. The most anticipated of these is Shanghainese designer Uma Wang, who American Vogue featured following the Paris show in October.

While many popular European brands like Louis Vuitton have an artisanal history spanning several centuries, young Chinese dominate the top business schools and creative colleges  More.......

(via Red-Luxury.com)

 

 

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