China’s retail sales, a gauge of consumption, grew a subdued 3.2% in September
A woman shops at a Louis Vuitton store in downtown Shanghai. — Reuters file
China’s second-hand and grey markets for luxury goods are booming, as price hikes from luxury brands in a weak economy are prompting some shoppers to look for cheaper ways to buy them, deepening concerns for the likes of LVMH.
LVHM, the world’s biggest luxury group, reported a three per cent fall in quarterly profit last week, undershooting estimates in its first decline in quarterly sales since the pandemic as demand in China and Japan weakened.
Italy’s Salvatore Ferragamo also reported a fall in quarterly revenue, hit by a slowdown in demand from China.
“The elephant in the room is that, in China, as long as price gaps (between China and other countries) exist, there is the opportunity for price sensitive consumers to go to the grey market,” said Max Piero, CEO of luxury intelligence consultancy Re-Hub, which tracks grey market luxury purchases in China.
That market, estimated to be worth $57 billion a year, has been fuelled in recent years by the rise of platforms such as DeWu, where luxury products, often sourced overseas, are sold at discounts from 20 per cent to over 50 per cent to prices at Chinese flagship stores.
Re-Hub estimates that sales across 48 brands on DeWu rose 19 per cent year on year in the second quarter to more than 7 billion yuan ($984.4 million).
“The rising prices of those luxury brands is definitely one of the reasons that more and more consumers are turning to the secondary market,” said Yi Kejie, a 28-year-old marketing content manager, a frequent buyer of both new and second-hand luxury goods.
The growth of the second hand market, parallel imports and other grey markets, locally known as cross-border ‘daigou’ trade, is also fuelled by the country’s slowing economy, as more people are looking to make some cash off their luxury collections, industry executives said.
China’s retail sales, a gauge of consumption, grew a subdued 3.2 per cent in September and the weakness is a bad sign for global luxury giants as China accounts for around 25 per cent of worldwide revenues for the sector.
A man walks past a store of luxury brand Burberry at a shopping mall in Beijing. — Reuters file
Growing consumer interest in the second-hand and grey markets is adding a headache to top-end brands seeking to defend their sales in China.
Second hand oversupply
Following the release of their third quarter earnings, executives of LVMH, home to Louis Vuitton and Dior, defended their labels’ upmarket push and said they did not plan to introduce new ranges of more affordable products.
They also said they had no intention of getting involved in the second-hand market, noting that the tight control their brands hold on distribution makes them less exposed to parallel markets.
But even the second-hand market is suffering from over-supply.
“The number of sellers is growing really fast, and the majority of them are selling luxury items for the first time. But for the buyer’s side, it’s pretty steady,” said Zhu Tainiqi, founder of second-hand luxury goods marketplace ZZER.
That has caused average purchase prices to drop from last year, and average order values also fell around 10 per cent, Zhu said, adding however that brands such as Louis Vuitton and Coach are still selling quickly.
The second-hand luxury market in China - which includes platforms such as Plum, ZZER and Alibaba-owned Xianyu - has grown at a compound annual growth rate of over 30 per cent since 2020, according to consultancy iResearch estimates, although Zhu personally thinks this year the sector as a whole in China is more likely to grow around 20 per cent.
Zhu said some of the consumers turning to second-hand and grey market goods will still buy new luxury items and shift just part of their consumption to those markets. “If the deal is really attractive, and they trust us, they notice every item is authenticated, they will buy it,” he said.