Luxury Institute News

September 12, 2012

Poor Burberry earnings point to problems for luxury market

By Stacey Vanek Smith
Marketplace
September 11th, 2012

Shares of Burberry are down more than 18 percent this morning. The luxury retailer slashed profit forecasts and warned that the luxury goods market is headed for hard times.

The main cause, says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, is global slowdown. Even while other retailers struggled, luxury retailers were boosted by sales from overseas, especially in Asia.

“China had been the engine of growth for the last several years,” says Pedraza, “[and] it generated a tremendous number of tourists who had been holding up the European luxury market.”

The Chinese slowdown, therefore, has not only affected the luxury market there, but also in Europe.

Luxury retailers could react in a number of ways, says Pedraza, from lowering their prices to reducing their inventory. Most importantly, though, he thinks they will “go after retaining customers who have purchased before,” hoping to increase customer culture and keep previous customers coming back.

http://www.marketplace.org/topics/business/poor-burberry-earnings-point-problems-luxury-market

January 18, 2012

Wealthy Consumers From Seven Nations Define What Constitutes Luxury and How They Shop and Rank Brands; Superior Quality, Craftsmanship and Customer Service Remain Essential but Many Firms Fall Short

(NEW YORK) Jan 17, 2012 — The independent and objective New York City-based Luxury Institute just released “Luxury Branding and Marketing: A Global Comparison of Wealthy Consumers in Top Markets,” a comprehensive survey of wealthy consumers in the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and China.

Topping the list of attributes that define luxury brands are superior quality (73%), craftsmanship (65%) and design (54%). Nearly half (47%) of wealthy shoppers worldwide cite customer service as a key consideration, with Chinese especially likely to judge a brand based on service.

Potentially distressing for luxury brands is the global perception by wealthy consumers that firms are getting worse at executing on these top criteria. Twice as many wealthy U.S. shoppers (34% vs. 17%) say that customer service and product quality have deteriorated in recent years. Japanese, German and U.K. consumers bemoan a slip in craftsmanship.

The good news is that satisfaction levels across criteria remain high in the world’s most rapidly growing luxury market, China, where 63% of consumers say that service has improved. A vast majority applauds higher quality, craftsmanship and design.

“With signs of cooling in luxury retail, top-flight firms worldwide realize that fostering a customer-centric culture is essential for retaining and growing relationships with current customers and gaining new ones,” says Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute.

Respondents had minimum annual income of $150,000, or the local currency equivalent.

For details from this WealthSurvey and others, visit LuxuryInstitute.com.

About Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com)
The Luxury Institute is the objective and independent global voice of the high net-worth consumer. The Institute conducts extensive and actionable research with wealthy consumers about their behaviors and attitudes on customer experience best practices. In addition, we work closely with top-tier luxury brands to successfully transform their organizational cultures into more profitable customer-centric enterprises. Our Luxury CRM Culture consulting process leverages our fact-based research and enables luxury brands to dramatically Outbehave as well as Outperform their competition. The Luxury Institute also operates LuxuryBoard.com, a membership-based online research portal, and the Luxury CRM Association, a membership organization dedicated to building customer-centric luxury enterprises.

November 30, 2011

Men, Not Women, Drive Luxury Goods Sales in China

By Neerja Pawha Jetley
CNBC
November 29, 2011

Contrary to popular perception, men — not women — make up the bulk of consumers buying luxury goods in China. From Giorgio Armani clothes to Gucci handbags and Rolex watches, Chinese men have been outstripping women when it comes to shopping.

In 2010, Chinese men spent 7 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) on their wardrobes, far more than the 2.8 billion yuan spent by women, according to a Bain report. Further, the market for luxury menswear in China is expected to rise 9 percent in 2011 compared to 7 percent for women’s wear, according to the consulting firm.

Looking to tap this spending power of Chinese men is Landmark Men – a 60,000 square-foot men’s-only mall in Hong Kong. Luxury brands like Valentino Men, Gucci and Louis Vuitton are nestled amongst premium grooming products, fragrances and gadgets in this sprawling mall that opened in October 2011.

Victor Luis, president of Coach Retail International in Shanghai was quoted by the Los Angeles Times as saying men make up 45 percent of the $1.2 billion market for all luxury handbags in China. In the U.S., that figure is just 7 percent. He added that “There’s a confidence and comfort in Chinese men utilizing bags in the same manner as women do.”

Vinay Dixit, Senior Expert and Leader of McKinsey Asia Consumer Center, told CNBC that over the past 12 months, Chinese men on average spent 61 percent more than women on fragrances and 52 per cent more on watches.

Seeing this growing affinity among Chinese men to shop, luxury brands are going all out to woo them. Dior Homme, for example, has around 35 freestanding men’s stores in China.

Burberry, the maker of the iconic check trench coat, has opened 59 stores in 31 Chinese cities with every store carrying a wider selection of men’s styles compared to other markets.

Louis Vuitton now has 36 stores in 29 cities across the mainland, compared to stores in just 10 cities in 2005. The company has used an Asian male model for the first time in its 2011 advertising campaign, a likely attempt to woo the male shopper in China.

Other retailers are also expanding rapidly. Gucci, which started with just six stores at the beginning of 2006, has 39 stores today. Hermes quadrupled its stores from five in 2005 to 20 today. All these stores house the company’s full range, including menswear. “There’s a reason for the rush: while many other markets are flat or shrinking, luxury goods are booming in China,” according to a 2011 McKinsey Insights China research report.

The report points out that China will account for over 20 percent of global luxury sales by 2015 and will overtake Japan as the world’s largest market for luxury goods. Market watchers say Chinese male consumers will drive much of this growth.

The average male luxury shopper in China is less than 45 years old, educated, well-traveled and entrepreneurial, says McKinsey‘s Dixit.

According to a senior manager at a prominent luxury brand in Hong Kong, until a few years back, luxury consumption in China was a result of businessmen traveling abroad and bringing home fine goods. “Men were bigger shoppers than women, buying gifts for wives and business associates, very often for government officials,” he said.

But the motivations have now changed. Men are now rewarding themselves for hard work and success. “They also consider luxury labels as lending credence to not just their social status, but individual style,” said the McKinsey report.

L’Oreal, the French personal care products company, now sells more male grooming products in China than in Western Europe, according to media reports.

Sales in China in 2010 rose to 9.085 billion yuan ($1.38 billion), an 11.1 percent increase over the previous year, and a double-digit gain for the 10th consecutive year, said Alexis Perakis-Valat, CEO of L’Oreal China at a news conference in Beijing earlier this year.

According to a recent seven-country survey conducted by the New-York based Luxury Institute, attitudes toward shopping for luxury goods were far more positive in China than in rich nations. Seventy-five percent of Chinese said that luxury expenditures were “prudent” purchases, while 78 percent of wealthy consumers in the U.S., U.K., and Germany considered them to be an “extravagance.”

http://www.cnbc.com/id/45472638

October 17, 2011

China Leads World in Luxury Spending

By Anthony DeMarco
Forbes
October 14, 2011

Affluent consumers in the U.S. and much of the world are pulling back on their spending and attitude toward luxury. However, in China, affluent consumers are choosing luxury in every aspect of the lives, according to a seven-country survey of households earning at least $150,000.

About 57 percent of wealthy Chinese shoppers say that the economic environment has prompted them to spend more on luxury in the past year, and 50 percent plan to boost spending in the next 12 months, according to the survey by the Luxury Institute, a New York-based consulting firm. Restraint is more evident in the U.S., where 10 percent of the wealthy stepped up luxury spending in the past year and 6 percent plan to spend more in the next 12 months. U.S. consumers are twice as likely as those in China (32% vs. 16%) to have trimmed luxury spending last year.

Meanwhile, in Europe the currency crisis did not stop 14 percent of wealthy shoppers in France and 17 percent of those in Italy from boosting luxury spending this year, according to the survey, which represents the top 10 percent in household income. However, 38 percent of high-income shoppers in both countries plan to cut back in the coming year.

In Japan, the March earthquake and tsunami dampened enthusiasm for luxury shopping, with 7 percent of wealthy Japanese consumers reporting higher levels of spending and 34 percent cutting back.

The most widespread retrenchment comes in the U.K., where 38 percent of wealthy shoppers have pared back luxury spending, and 41 percent plan reductions in coming months. Germany shows more stability compared to other rich nations: Only 17 percent of wealthy German consumers say that they are spending less on luxury now and 29 percent plan to trim luxuries in the coming year.

Across all seven markets, luxury travel is the category in which most wealthy consumers anticipate stepping up spending, with China far and away showing the strongest appetite, according to the survey.

In China, 58 percent of the wealthy plan to spend more on leisure travel, followed by 28 percent in Italy and 22 percent in Germany who say the same. A total of 16 percent of wealthy consumers in the U.K., and 18 percent in the U.S., Japan, France and Italy, plan to spend more on travel.

Spending plans across the board in each of the 26 luxury categories were substantially higher in China than in Europe and the U.S., with some of the biggest disparities showing in apparel, watches, jewelry and gifts where Chinese consumers were six to seven times more likely to boost spending, according to the survey. Also strong in China are luxury auto sales, with 43 percent of the wealthy planning to spend more on cars, compared to 11 percent in the U.S., U.K. and Japan.

Attitudes towards luxury are far more positive in China than they are in other rich nations, with 78 percent of those surveyed saying that luxury goods and services are more important in today’s economy. The reverse is true in the U.S. where 80 percent of wealthy shoppers say that luxury has become less important.

More than 75 percent of Chinese say that luxury expenditures are prudent purchases, while 78 percent of wealthy consumers in the U.S., U.K., and Germany find them to be an extravagance. Similarly, 78 percent of China’s wealthy shoppers say that luxury goods and services are an important part of their lifestyle in today’s economy, compared to 25 percent in U.S. and Germany and 20 percent in France who agree that luxury remains central in their lives.

Wealthy Chinese consumers are also highly inclined to place a premium on exclusivity and quality, and discounting turns them off. More than half of wealthy Chinese and 49 percent of Japanese say that brands that discount their merchandise are not truly luxury brands. In the U.S. and Germany, one-third of wealthy consumers share the same dim view of discounting, as do 40 percent of wealthy shoppers in the U.K, Italy and France. Despite the dour attitude towards discounting, 56 percent of wealthy Chinese say that discounting has increased their overall spending on luxury and 50 percent plan to spend more on discounted luxury items in the coming months.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/anthonydemarco/2011/10/14/china-leads-world-in-luxury-spending/

 

September 28, 2011

Luxury Spending Surge Continues in China Even as Wealthy Throttle Back on Purchases in Europe, Japan and U.S.; Half of Wealthy Chinese Plan to Spend More on Luxury This Year, Compared to Just 6% in the U.S., Japan and Germany

(NEW YORK) Sep 28, 2011- Wealthy shoppers from seven countries around the globe earning at least $150,000 (in local currency) reveal candid attitudes on luxury brands and personal spending plans in the “2011 State of the Luxury Industry: A Global Comparison of Consumers in Top Markets.” The just-completed survey conducted by the independent and objective New York City-based Luxury Institute shows strong increases in luxury spending continuing to come from China, while restraint is more widespread in the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Italy and Japan.

More than half (57%) of wealthy Chinese shoppers say that the current economic environment has prompted them to spend more on luxury in the past year; 50% plan to boost spending in the next 12 months. This compares to just 10% of the wealthy in the U.S. who have stepped up spending recently and 6% who plan to spend more this year. In the U.S., consumers are twice as likely as they are in China (32% vs. 16%) to have trimmed luxury spending last year.

More than half of wealthy Chinese expect to boost spending on luxury travel, apparel, fitness, jewelry and shoes.

“China is clearly driving growth in global luxury brands,” says Luxury Institute CEO Milton Pedraza. “Exclusivity and prestige continue to be highly prized by wealthy Chinese consumers, even more than in the U.S. or Europe.”

For more details in the complete survey, visit LuxuryInstitute.com.

About Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com)
The Luxury Institute is the objective and independent global voice of the high net-worth consumer. The Institute conducts extensive and actionable research with wealthy consumers about their behaviors and attitudes on customer experience best practices. In addition, we work closely with top-tier luxury brands to successfully transform their organizational cultures into more profitable customer-centric enterprises. Our Luxury CRM Culture consulting process leverages our fact-based research and enables luxury brands to dramatically Outbehave as well as Outperform their competition. The Luxury Institute also operates LuxuryBoard.com, a membership-based online research portal, and the Luxury CRM Association, a membership organization dedicated to building customer-centric luxury enterprises.

For Further Information, Please Contact:

The Luxury Institute, LLC
Martin Swanson
Vice President
(914) 909-6350
mswanson@luxuryinstitute.com

January 21, 2011

Unloading the loaded

Catering to the whims of the rich is big business

The Economist
January 20, 2011

The seven-star Burj-al-Arab hotel in Dubai is not for those who like their elegance understated. The presidential suite is an explosion of gold, purple, marble and opulence. Some guests prefer it to the even more expensive royal suite (which is $18,000 a night), says a helpful member of staff, because the decor in the royal suite is even livelier.

When you are seriously rich it is hard to spend all your money, but some creative people will help you try. Quintessentially, a firm founded by Ben Elliot, a nephew of the Duchess of Cornwall, specialises in giving the rich whatever they want, wherever they are. Some requests-tea with Britain’s queen, for example-can be a bit difficult, says Mr Elliot. But if a client needs a life-size edible cake costume for a birthday bash, or wants to fly along the Great Wall of China, his global network of fixers will fix it.

The financial crisis hurt sales of luxury goods, which fell by 8% in 2009. But Bain, a consultancy, estimates that in 2010 they grew by 10% worldwide, and by an astounding 30% in China, where the boom barely faltered. In the West the rich have cut back on ostentatious baubles and instead gone for experiences, such as yoga retreats in India or personal coaches to teach them about Buddhism, says Milton Pedraza of the Luxury Institute, a consultancy. China’s new millionaires have no such qualms. One retailer there started selling Smart cars covered in Swarovski crystals last year.

What the rich lack is time, says a former personal assistant to celebrities. They may decide to go for a weekend in Thailand on the spur of the moment, and the personal assistant has to make it happen. Another popular time-saver is a medical concierge service. PinnacleCare, for example, will send a doctor “to your home, your office [or] your ski chalet”, says Bruce Spector, the founder.

Rich people also want help with handling their money. Creating a fortune is often fun, but conserving it can be tedious, says Charles Lowenhaupt, an adviser to the wealthy. A family may have 100 members scattered over multiple jurisdictions and 150 trusts, making tax planning a trifle complex.

Yet the basic problems are the same everywhere. Mr Lowenhaupt recalls an acquaintance from China teaching him a Chinese saying, “rice paddy to rice paddy in three generations”. The acquaintance was surprised to learn that other cultures have similar proverbs.

http://www.economist.com/node/17929047?story_id=17929047&fsrc=rss

March 9, 2010

What Chinese Shoppers Want

Forbes.com
Evelyn Rusli
March 8, 2010

Luxury goods makers find growth in China.

“Fashion fades, only style remains the same,” says Jasper Liu, 26, summarizing his approach to shopping by quoting Coco Chanel.

Liu, a self-described “Shanghai Hipster,” represents the nouveau riche of China. He reads English literature, watches European movies, drinks fine champagne and is a loyal patron of luxury retailers, namely Lanvin and Yves Saint Laurent.

The affection is mutual: Fashion houses with global ambitions are courting Chinese consumers like Jasper, eager to learn how they spend, why they spend and just how much they’re willing to spend.

The answer: quite a lot if the quality and label are right. In a recent study by retail consulting firm Pao Principle, the average Chinese luxury consumer will spend roughly 11% of her income on luxury handbags alone. The group’s favorite brands, in order of preference: Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Coach, Chanel and Prada.

Over the past year Patti Pao, the founder of Pao Principle, has collected data on the mainland’s elite consumers: amassing a panel of 356 individuals who have purchased a luxury handbag, watch or fine jewelry piece in the last twelve months. Her snapshots of their habits create a portrait of a misunderstood luxury consumer who is highly educated and highly motivated to identify products that will complement his or her individuality and rising power.

For Pao the project was critical to her business. After the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, her retail clients fled, “I said, what would it take for you to hire us back, and they basically said, ‘The U.S. is dead, Europe is dead, Japan is dead and we’re putting all our resources in either the Middle East or in China. If you can help us … we’d be happy to speak with you again.’” The mature markets may not be “dead,” but numbers confirm that momentum is indeed swinging: According to an October 2009 Bain & Company report, the U.S. luxury market likely fell 16% that year, Europe was off 8%— but China, which is described as the “new real frontier of luxury,” rose an estimated 12%.

And according to the Luxury Institute’s latest report on the high-end market (released in September 2009) 33% of respondents said they plan to spend less on handbags this year. “Even the wealthiest of consumers are now living within their means, which will have a somber, dampening effect on the market,” says Luxury Institute’s CEO, Milton Pedraza.

“U.S. consumers who are making $150,000 or more, spend about $3,000 a year on handbags, which is a pittance compared to the Chinese.” For comparison, 90% of Pao’s panelists who had purchased a handbag in the past 12 months are planning or considering the purchase of another luxury bag in the next six months.

For Western companies China can be a difficult market to crack due to its language barrier and inherently private culture. In a nation still challenged by censorship issues, Pao says people are generally hesitant to share personal and honest information. But Pao, a Chinese-American whose parents are from Nanjing, says her ties to mainland China gave her a natural advantage. “All of our correspondence was done in Mandarin. We leveraged our network of friends and families, so that we were able to hand select and hand screen a panel…who because we knew them or were tied to them in some way shape or form would tell us the truth.”

That panel is highly educated and has serious spending power: 70% graduated from college, with many holding advanced degrees: 80% own a own home; and nearly 90% bought a luxury handbag in the last 12 months. The average annual salary of a panelist is 125,000 yuan, or $18,382–which may seem low compared with U.S. wages, but is more than triple the average salary in Shanghai, which is 39,000 yuan or $5,735, and goes a lot further in China. Many of the panelists are young, college graduates from wealthy families who recently entered the work force. While their means seem modest compared to luxury buyers in the U.S., Pao found that many outspend their Western counterparts, dollar for dollar. Of the 311 panelists who bought a handbag in the last 12 months, the average purchase price per bag was $1,000 and the average panelist bought two bags, according to Pao’s data.

China’s lust for luxury may seem a pure power play, a competition to amass the greatest number of logos, but Pao says it has become more nuanced than that. As Chinese consumers become more sophisticated and savvy, they’re using fashion to differentiate themselves and project a personal statement. Twenty years ago people bought luxury goods because it signified how successful they were: “Literally, you were judged by the clothes that you wore on your back,” she says. “The trend is shifting, because in the 1970s China enacted the one-child policy,” Pao says. “Now China has a population of very wealthy households. [Their] children are cosseted, coveted, pampered … they’re self-centered and they’re spoiled,” says Pao. “It’s just how they describe themselves.”

As a result the country has moved away from a group-think mentality to a more individual-centered mindset. Luxury products that offer an opportunity for differentiation, such as limited editions, are highly sought after by her panelists, including “Shanghai Hipster” Liu. He admits China’s consumers are more brand-oriented but says that only “unsophisticated luxury shoppers would select luxuries with visible logos to show off their new ‘conquest.’ ”

Pao’s report concludes that the country’s wealthy consumers and its aspirational class are willing to spend money (while scrimping and saving if necessary) to buy the finest goods, but they are more discerning than ever. Pao warns that China can no longer be used as a dumping ground for excess inventory and says designers will have to create limited editions exclusively for the market.

The Chinese consumer understands that “after 2009 they’re going to be the number one consumer of luxury goods in the world,” Pao says. “And they’re expecting acknowledgment for that.”

http://www.forbes.com/2010/03/08/china-shoppers-luxury-markets-equities-lifestyle.html