The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Luxury sales gloomy

Slumps expected to deepen despite easing lockdowns

- SILVIA ALOISI REUTERS

MILAN — Global sales of luxury goods are expected to slump by 50 per cent to 60 per cent in the second quarter even as some countries begin to ease coronaviru­s lockdowns and despite signs of recovery in the Chinese market, consultanc­y Bain said Thursday.

The coronaviru­s crisis, which first hit China late last year before spreading to Europe and the United States, has kept shoppers at home and forced retailers to shut stores, resulting in a crushing halt to a decade of spectacula­r growth for high-end brands.

With the April to June decline coming on top of an estimated 25 per cent drop in the first three months of the year, Bain expects global sales of luxury handbags, clothing and cosmetics to shrink by between 20 per cent and 35 per cen in 2020, against a previous estimate for a 15 per cen to 35 per cen decline.

The consultanc­y, which produces closely followed forecasts for the sector, says it will take until 2022-23 for revenues to return to 2019 levels, which are estimated by Bain to have totalled US$303.5 billion.

An April report by fellow consultanc­y McKinsey said the personal luxury goods industry is expected to contract by 35 per cent to 39 per cent this year.

If stores remain shuttered for two months, roughly 80 per cent of listed fashion companies in Europe and North America will be “in a state of financial distress”, McKinsey said.

A recent rebound in China, where the lockdown has been gradually eased since March, is helping offset some of the decline in Europe and the United States, where luxury goods stores are only expected to reopen in the second half of May.

The best-performing brands are already registerin­g a year-on-year sales increase in China for the first four months of 2020, Bain said. Store traffic has nearly halved from a year ago, but people who do venture out are more inclined to buy and the average spend has also increased.

CHINESE UPLIFT

Bain did not name brands, but Louis Vuitton and Dior owner LVMH has said that sales in mainland China had jumped by 50 per cent in some cases during the first weeks of April, while Hermes has also reported a sharp pickup in Chinese business.

Hugo Boss is also seeing signs of a sales rebound in China and online, it said this week as it reported a 17% drop in first-quarter sales and forecast a 50 per cent slump in the second quarter.

“If a customer goes to a store, there is a very good motivation to buy,” said Federica Levato, a partner at Bain.

Chinese shoppers accounted for 35 percent of global luxury spending in 2019 and Bain expects their influence on the sector to grow even further in the next few years — making up nearly half of all luxury sales in 2025.

With global travel not expected to return to normal levels for up to two years, Chinese consumers who used to make most of their luxury purchases abroad will largely be shopping at home, accelerati­ng a trend that was already underway.

Beijing has cut import duties and sales tax, eroding the competitiv­e price advantage of destinatio­ns such as London and New York, while Hong Kong — long a shopping magnet for Chinese from the mainland — has lost its lustre after months of protests last year.

“For sure the repatriati­on of purchases in China will be faster,” said Levato, adding that consumer morale is also likely to bounce back more quickly in Asia than in recession-hit Europe or the United States.

“If luxury brands are able to serve their customers in China with the same service level and offer the same experience (that they would be normally offering abroad) then they can recover the bulk of what they are losing in terms of Chinese tourists no longer shopping in Europe or the U.S.,” she said.

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