China's 'thrifty' luxury shoppers
China's luxury buyers embrace thrift
October 30, 2012 -- Updated 0201 GMT (1001 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Until very recently, nouveau riche Chinese would not have been caught dead buying cast-offs
- A new brand of luxury shopper is emerging: the kind that loves a bargain more than a logo.
But as the Chinese
market, which many luxury goods companies have come to rely on for
growth in recent years, matures, a new brand of luxury shopper is
emerging in China: the kind that loves a bargain more than a logo.
Shops selling, renting
and repairing second-hand luxury goods are springing up across China,
along with branches of high-end consignment shops from Japan and Hong
Kong that buy and sell second-hand goods, paying the seller a
commission.
Milan Court was one of
the first pre-owned luxury stores in Shanghai when it opened eight years
ago. But its owner Liu Lian says she only recently started putting her
logo on the store's shopping bags because consumers used to be ashamed
to be caught buying used goods.
There are now signs that
the stigma is melting away. Since 2009, Milan Court has posted
double-digit annual sales growth, and the shop has hundreds of bags for
sale, many on consignment from individuals. Ms Liu has opened six shops
in Shanghai and plans to expand to other provinces.
Nidia Yuan, a regular
customer of Milan Court, likes the fact she can purchase unused bags at
the shop for 20-30 per cent less than retail.
"I don't mind people knowing that I carry second-hand bags," Ms Yuan says. "I think it is worth it to buy at those prices".
The second-hand shops should not be confused with the kind of high street thrift shops found in London or New York.
Ju Geng, a second-hand
shop in Shanghai's chic French concession, has shelves packed with new
or barely used Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Hermès bags. They range in price
from Rmb2,000 ($320) for the cheapest Gucci to Rmb400,000 for a
crocodile Birkin from Hermès.
Just down the road at Ms
Liu's Milan Court -- housed in a European-style villa with a sun-filled
garden -- the crocodile Birkin is still top of the price chain at
Rmb300,000.
At one branch of
Japanese second-hand chain Brand Off in Shanghai's French concession, a
Hermès Birkin with a child's drawing in black marker filling one entire
side was priced at Rmb90,000.
Ms Liu and her
competitors say the people selling them handbags are not in it for the
money, unlike in the west where consumers liquidate luxury items in
times of economic distress.
Even now, when economic
growth on the mainland has slowed to 7.4 per cent, no one is emptying
their closets of Gucci to feed the children.
Jo Zhou, manager of Ju
Geng, says the popularity of luxury thrift stores has more to do with
growing sophistication than with desperation. As Chinese consumers who
once thought they were too rich to buy used goods travel more, they
become familiar with foreign concepts such as second-hand shops.
The rise of the second-hand stores also reflects a profound shift in the taste of mainland luxury consumers.
Ms Zhou says shoppers
from less developed fashion markets outside Shanghai still come to her
shop looking for logo-heavy products such as Gucci or Louis Vuitton. But
Shanghai shoppers "prefer to be more low profile," she says, noting
that their favourite brands are Bottega Veneta, Prada, Céline and
Hermès.
The buyers are getting
younger too: many are students, white collar workers at the start of
their careers, or even younger, says Ms Liu of Milan Court.
Additional reporting by Yan Zhang in Shanghai COPY http://edition.cnn.com
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