Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Pnyin - Luxury brands on scent of Chinese women







CITYLIFE / Hip & New






Luxury brands on scent of Chinese women

( Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2006-11-03 10:34


Women in China are catching up to men as consumers of luxury goods,
industry officials said yesterday.

More economic independence is giving women more buying power, a speaker
told the annual China Luxury Summit in Shanghai.

And as incomes rise and the middle class expands, research indicates that
shoppers in Shanghai are increasingly turning up their noses at luxury
goods, while consumers in second-tier cities can't get enough.

"Men have been the traditional buyers, and in 2001, three out of four
consumers were men," said Emmanuel Prat, president of LVMH Moet Hennessy
Louis Vuitton, the world's biggest luxury goods group with products
ranging from perfume to champagne.

"But now, as women are becoming more economically independent, they
account for a larger share of the luxury market and there is big
potential," he said.

A survey by consultants KPMG, Australia's Monash University and market
research firm TNS found young Chinese women are beginning to supplant
businessmen aged over 35 as the main Chinese buyers of luxury goods.

"Until recently 90 percent of all luxury spending in China was dictated
by men ... The modern female luxury shopper includes the business woman,
the celebrity and the newly independent rich wife," the survey found.

It found respondents from Shanghai, long known for its conspicuous
consumption, had now become "the most cynical in their attitudes to
luxury and the least likely to own luxury brands as a status symbol."

Almost 70 percent of respondents from medium-sized cities saw people who
own luxury brands as successful, compared to under 55 percent in Shanghai.

The luxury market in China - now the world's third-largest consumer of
luxury goods after Japan and the United States - is expected to grow 20
percent annually until 2008, and then 10 percent a year until 2015 when
sales will exceed US$11.5 billion, the survey estimated.

At that time, China would consume just under a third of the world's total
luxury goods.

Calvin Klein, which sells high-end perfume and clothes, is one of many
foreign luxury firms looking to expand its presence in China's
second-tier cities, company president Tom Murry said on the sidelines of
the event.

"While the affluence is growing quickly, it's still a relatively small
population that can consume a luxury product, so we'll see that continue
to grow over time," said Murry.










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