Luxury giants bank on Chinese return as Western shoppers sober up
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[January 23, 2023] By
Mimosa Spencer
PARIS (Reuters) - The focus of the luxury industry is shifting back to
China, with hopes that its high-end spenders will once again splurge on
designer goods during Lunar New Year festivities as Beijing relaxes
COVID curbs after three long years.
Quarterly results from LVMH and Europe's other luxury goods companies
will offer glimpses of the toll of last year's COVID-related disruptions
in China, even as the companies roll out pricey new collections tied to
the Year of the Rabbit.
They are expected to see a deceleration in sales growth over the quarter
as the post-pandemic splurge on designer fashions begins to ease in the
United States and Europe.
Consensus estimates cited by UBS are for fourth quarter sales growth of
7% at LVMH, which releases full-year results on Thursday, and for a
sales decline of 2% at Kering, which reports results on Feb. 15. Hermes,
which reports fourth-quarter results on Feb. 17, is expected to show
sales growth of 17%, a decline from 24% in the third quarter.
The industry's showing in China will highlight the hit from lockdowns
and its subsequent exit from a zero-COVID policy, which has spurred a
surge of infections in the world's second-largest economy. Luxury
spending by Chinese nationals had dipped from 33% of the global personal
luxury goods market in 2019 to as little as 17% last year, according to
estimates from consultancy Bain.
"We do believe they will come back to the luxury sector in a heavy way,
to catch up on what they couldn’t do in 2022," said Caroline Reyl, head
of Premium Brands at Pictet Asset Management, referring to Chinese
consumers.
End-of-year trading updates last week from Britain's Burberry and
Cartier-owner Richemont gave investors a peek at the knock.
Richemont missed market estimates after sales in China plunged by a
quarter. Customer traffic at its stores dwindled and staff at times were
not available. Many stores reduced hours or closed temporarily.
Burberry's like-for-like sales growth slowed sharply to 1% in the
quarter to end-December after a 23% fall in mainland China.
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The logo of Hermes is seen on a store in
Paris, France, April 24, 2020. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
But Burberry said it was optimistic consumers in China would start
spending again and Richemont saw a rebound there before the holiday,
adding to rising expectations for the months ahead.
China is forecast to become the luxury industry's biggest market by
2025. The luxury sector is among the largest expected winners from
China’s loosening of restrictions that kept shoppers out of stores
for months, with shares at LVMH, Europe's most valuable listed
company worth about 400 billion euros ($433.1 billion) and Hermes
recently hitting all-time highs.
At Paris fashion shows, which run through the end of this week,
Chinese buyers, a staple at such events before the pandemic hit,
still haven't returned in droves.
Although the Chinese are expected to initially resume travelling
within Asia, Europe is a region that particularly stands to benefit
from a return of Chinese tourists. Reyl told Reuters she believes
Chinese shoppers may begin to return to Europe in a noticeable way
at the end of the second quarter or during the second half of this
year.
In the United States, some Americans are cutting back discretionary
spending due to decades-high inflation. Credit card data from
Citigroup showed that luxury spending in the United States in
December was down 10% year-on-year and, compared to 2019, turned
negative, down 2%, largely due to weaker business in department
stores and online platforms.
However, travelling Americans likely continued boosting the fortunes
of luxury labels in Europe, with U.S. nationals leading a recovery
in tax-free shopping in Europe, according to December data from
Global Blue.
(Reporting by Mimosa Spencer; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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