U.S. 'aspirational' shoppers are spending less on fashion, jewelry
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[June 10, 2023] By
Katherine Masters
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A gulf in spending patterns between wealthy
Americans and so-called "aspirational" shoppers is driving luxury
retailers to search out new sources of revenue and, in some cases, to
shift their merchandise strategies, several retailers said.
Jewelry company Signet , which owns brands including Kay, Jared and
Zales, was the latest retailer to link lagging sales to a downturn in
spending by so-called "aspirational" customers, who occasionally
purchase goods priced between $300 and $800, but are more sensitive to
the cost of essentials.
Signet noticed a sales decline in fashion jewelry priced below $5,000 in
April, a trend that continued into June. Sales of items priced above
$5,000, however, remained strong, Signet's Chief Financial Officer Joan
Hilson said in an interview Friday.
Signet is expanding services to drive spending and is counting on more
sales of warranty and protection plans for watches and jewelry, Hilson
said. A protection plan for a $3,200 tennis bracelet at Kay, for
example, adds $315 to the price.
Signet lowered its full-year revenue outlook on Thursday after the
company flagged a “deteriorating” consumer environment.
'TAKING DOLLARS AWAY'
Retailers need to make up for the loss in sales due to falling demand
from people who lack the means to regularly shell out on high-priced
purchases.
“Inflation and food and other costs are taking dollars away" from the
so-called aspirational shoppers, said Cowen and Company analyst Oliver
Chen. Their desire to splurge in prior years represented a growth
segment for luxury goods.
Macy’s noted a drop in sales was most pronounced at its namesake
department store chain, where 85% of customers' households earn $150,000
a year or less, CEO Jeff Gennette said on June 1. Some customers at the
company's Bloomingdale's unit, which draws a wealthier clientele, were
also pressured by inflation, but "not at the same rate or intensity as
Macy's," according to Gennette.
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A shopper looks at jewelry in a store
window in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., December 8, 2020.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/
In recent weeks, both Ralph Lauren and Capri, the owner of Versace,
Michael Kors and Jimmy Choo, disclosed that they are doubling down
on their highest-end consumers as sales from aspirational shoppers
lag.
Ralph Lauren CEO Patrice Louvet said on May 31 the company had seen
growth at full-price stores while outlet sales declined.
“In North America specifically, there is continued divergence
between our core high-value consumers and that subset of more
value-oriented consumers,” he said. The company is stocking up on
core products including Oxford shirts, blazers and dresses, betting
that luxury consumers will be drawn to staples that can outlast
seasonal fashion trends.
Capri CEO John Idol told investors on May 25 it is pulling back
inventory from department stores and other wholesale channels, which
currently account for more than 20% of its sales. Idol said the
company is able to sell at higher prices in its own stores than in
department stores, where consumers seem resistant to recent price
increases.
As part of its ongoing “elevation strategy” for brands, he said the
company is phasing out Versace-branded tee-shirts, pool slides,
sneakers and other items that are “not really going to drive a
luxury customer perception."
(Reporting by Katherine Masters in New York; Editing by Nick
Zieminski)
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