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2015 China Luxury Market Study


MAINLAND CHINA'S LUXURY SPENDING CONTINUED ITS DECLINE IN 2015, HOWEVER, EMERGING SIGNS SIGNAL A REVERSAL IN 2016

Bain & Company's 2015 China Luxury Market Study finds that luxury brands need flexible pricing, a strong digital strategy and greater focus on fashion to win with Chinese consumers at home


In 2015, mainland Chinese consumers continued to indulge themselves with luxury purchases, accelerating their purchases abroad.  According to Bain & Company's 2015 China Luxury Market Study, increased international tourism, and growing comfort and trust in some business-to-consumer (B2C) overseas websites among China's shoppers stimulated overseas purchases.  This resulted in a slowdown in China's overall luxury market, which dipped 2 percent to 113B RMB last year, driven by a decline in watches, men's wear and leather goods.  Luxury brands seeking to overcome the economic slump and reinvigorate consumer spending domestically must employ a more tailored, localized marketing strategy, with high fashion content and adjust their pricing to reduce disparities across geographies.

Bain's research, which included a survey of nearly 1,500 Chinese consumers, found a sizable shift in shoppers' geographic preferences for luxury shopping in 2015.  Overall, overseas luxury purchases grew 10 percent, with consumers flocking to Japan, where their spending increased more than 200 percent.  South Korea, Europe and Australia were also popular shopping destinations, due to favorable exchange rates and competitive pricing on luxury goods in these markets.  However, luxury spending of mainland Chinese in Hong Kong and Macau dropped by one-quarter.

As overseas travel among Chinese shoppers increased – up an estimated 32 percent from 2014 – consumer reliance on Daigou, or overseas personal shoppers who buy and send luxury goods to customers in China – contracted.  The growing channel choice in 2014, Daigou decreased to an approximately 43B RMB market last year.  Bain attributes the drop to several factors including price adjustments by key brands that reduced Daigou margins, government efforts to tighten control over imports, including Daigou, a weakened RMB, and an increased reliance on other purchase channels – notably cross-border and overseas websites, which accounted for 48B RMB of the 293B RMB luxury spend overseas. The report highlights the increasing popularity of cross-border and overseas websites as luxury shopping channels: nearly half of those surveyed said they purchased luxury goods via these sites last year.

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“We saw notable changes in where and how Chinese consumers acquired luxury goods last year.  Buying overseas has been a trend for years, but destinations have changed, and Daigou is declining because of multiple and converging drivers from major industry players, including the government,” said Bruno Lannes, a Bain partner based in Shanghai and author of the report.  “Our research found that the industry is quickly adapting to these challenges in an effort to drive more luxury consumption at home through strategies such as global pricing and a greater focus on fashion.”

A corollary to the drop in domestic sales is a reduction of the store footprint by most brands, with a greater focus on fewer, larger and better located stores. Many brands realize that they need to regain their exclusive image, which has been somewhat blurred by overextension.

As in 2014, the research shows the greater importance of fashion and exclusive designs to win domestically. Brands with a strong fashion heritage and stronger emphasis on original design did well in 2015.

The survey reveals that nearly 80 percent of respondents said they normally get information on luxury brands from the internet or apps, and a full 60 percent identified social media channels Weibo and WeChat as their online source for information on luxury goods. As a result, brands spend, on average, 35 percent of their marketing budget on digital, and it is growing.

Looking ahead, Bain expects these and other 2015 trends to continue this year, prompting further challenges, opportunities and requirements for brands:

1. Macro environment expected to remain similar while the rising middle class becomes more sophisticated and knowledgeable about luxury.
2. Overseas channels will stabilize (daigou will decline).  Global pricing by leading brands and government efforts to localize consumption will spur domestic growth.  Global pricing, will likely spread further to other brands.
3. Luxury brands should strengthen both digital platform building (e.g., Weibo WeChat, apps) and digital content creation, with an emphasis on localization to reflect local market preferences.
4. Luxury brands must place greater emphasis on making their brand “younger” and more fashionable to capture the next generation of trendy customers.  There will also be an increased focus on “exclusivity,” both in product design and store footprint.

“Despite persistent macro, economic and industry challenges in China, all hope is not lost for luxury brands,” said Lannes. “There are plenty of growth opportunities for those with more exclusive and fashion collections, digital platform engagement and digital content creation, as well as with pricing that encourages Chinese consumers to spend locally.”



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