Skip to main content
BoF Logo

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

Luxury Back in Vogue as China's Middle Class Women Lead the Way

The country's luxury-goods market is growing steadily again, nearly five years after it was knocked off course by President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption drive.
Burberry store in China | Source: Burberry
By
  • Bloomberg

BEIJING, China — China's luxury-goods market is growing steadily again, nearly five years after it was knocked off course by President Xi Jinping's anti-corruption drive.

But the sector looks very different from back in 2012, when conspicuous spending by officials greasing the wheels of contracts was a key driver — spurring the crackdown on graft. Today, newly affluent consumers unaffected by government curbs are setting the pace. China's rising middle class is so important that it's set to be a main engine for luxury growth globally, Bain & Co. said in a recent report on the outlook to 2020.

“The anti-corruption campaign has removed the froth from the market, as spending and consumption is now very largely legitimate,” Luca Solca, head of luxury goods research at Exane BNP Paribas, said in a Sept. 25 email.

The composition of China’s high-end spending has also changed over the past half decade. Gift-giving used to be dominated by purchases for males, with luxury watches a particular favourite. The anti-graft push caused such sales to plunge. Now, the emphasis has switched to spending by women on designer handbags and costly perfume.

ADVERTISEMENT

Swiss watch exports to Hong Kong, a favourite destination for Chinese buyers, fell 25 percent last year, and the value of the market has halved in four years, according to the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry.

China’s luxury market "was mainly dominated by the male segment," Serena Rovai, a professor at France’s La Rochelle Business School, wrote in her book “Luxury the Chinese Way.” Now, there’s a more prominent female presence, "thanks to the increasing purchasing power of women and the anti-corruption policy regarding often male-driven gift-giving," she wrote.

Companies that have seen strong results in China this year include:

  • Burberry Group Plc reported "mid-teens percentage growth" in retail sales in the April-to-June quarter, with sales boosted by exposure on the WeChat social-media platform.
  • Kering, the owner of Gucci Group, said mainland revenue from its luxury brands jumped almost 50 percent in the first half compared with the first six months of last year. Sales at its Yves Saint Laurent unit were up nearly 67 percent.
  • LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE reported continuing robust upward momentum for wines and spirits, thanks in part to sales of Hennessy Cognac for Chinese New Year celebrations.

Results are proving so strong that Erwan Rambourg, global co-head of consumer and retail research at HSBC Holdings Plc, says his bank’s already bullish forecast of 10 percent growth for China’s luxury market this year versus 7 percent globally — could be surpassed.

The upturn, which started in the fourth quarter of 2016, has been helped by a turnaround in China’s exchange rate, along with gains in real-estate and equities — all of which have boosted the spending power of the nation’s consumers.

“You’ve had a bit of excess purchasing reversing very low purchasing, and we don’t think that can go on forever," Rambourg said in an interview by phone this week from New York. “Pent-up demand, by definition, doesn’t sustain.”

Yet an expanding mass market is lifting some high-end goods, like the premium Chinese liquor segment that was hit hard after 2012.

Aidan Yao, a senior emerging markets economist at AXA Investment Managers, said this week that the liquor increase is consistent with broader strength seen in domestic demand, retail sales and consumer spending.

By Colin Simpson; editors: Christopher Anstey and Ravil Shirodkar.

In This Article

© 2024 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Luxury
How rapid change is reshaping the tradition-soaked luxury sector in Europe and beyond.

Marine Serre: From Radical to Pragmatist

Serre, who grew sales by 20 percent in 2023, has been named Pitti Uomo’s next guest designer. She’s using the opportunity to show her men’s collection for the first time.


Who Gets to Buy a Birkin Bag?

Hermès’ elusive sales strategy is at the centre of a new legal challenge for the French luxury giant. BoF breaks down the practices under scrutiny and what the suit could mean for the fashion industry at large.


Can Gucci’s Turnaround Plan Still Work?

This week, Kering flagged sales were down 20 percent at its flagship brand, knocking confidence in the group’s turnaround strategy. ‘A more drastic solution is required,’ one analyst wrote.


view more

Subscribe to the BoF Daily Digest

The essential daily round-up of fashion news, analysis, and breaking news alerts.

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON
BoF Professional - How to Turn Data Into Meaningful Customer Connections
© 2024 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy, Cookie Policy and Accessibility Statement.
BoF Professional - How to Turn Data Into Meaningful Customer Connections