Arab Times

China’s yuan cut bad omen for France’s luxury sector

-

PARIS, Aug 19, (AFP): China’s triple yuan devaluatio­n could hit France’s lucrative luxury sector, which has already been impacted by Beijing’s tough anti-corruption drive against spendthrif­t officials, analysts say. The Asian powerhouse’s central bank cut the value of the yuan currency, also known as the renminbi, three days in a row last week, raising questions over the health of the world’s secondlarg­est economy and sending global financial markets into a tailspin.

The move also cast a cloud over the global luxury market as analysts worry that Chinese consumers, who make up more than 30 percent of worldwide luxury spending, would be less able to fork out cash for high-end handbags, wines or clothes. French giants such as LVMH or Hermes had already felt the pinch of China’s drive to end ostentatio­us spending and its slowing economic growth, which saw the country’s luxury market shrink for the first time last year, according to consultant­s Bain & Company.

And while the triple devaluatio­n in itself is not devastatin­g, it has been taken as a sign that the Chinese economy is performing worse than revealed — and that “will add more pressure on the sector,” says Cedric Rossi, an analyst at the Bryan, Garnier & Co investment bank. “The market (for luxury goods) had slowed down in China, but that was partly compensate­d by the fact that Chinese people spend a lot more in Europe,” he said.

“But if the devaluatio­n continues, the Chinese — 70 percent of whom buy their luxury products outside China — could buy less in Europe.”

LVMH — home to such brands as Louis Vuitton, Givenchy and Dior — makes 8.0 percent of its global sales in continenta­l China. Hermes reaps 12 percent and Kering’s luxury division including Gucci, Saint Laurent, sells 10 percent, according to analysis from Exane BNP Paribas. A falling yuan means smaller revenues out of China, and also makes it more expensive for Chinese firms to import goods in the first place.

Luxury goods are already between 35 to 50 percent pricier in China than in Europe due to import duties and taxes — a gap that will only widen as the yuan falls.

“Inevitably, such price disparity has encouraged opportunis­ts to buy up popular items in Europe, in bulk, and resell them in China at well below formal retail prices,” says Fflur Roberts, head of luxury goods at market intelligen­ce firm Euromonito­r Internatio­nal.

“The grey market is growing, and forcing the owners of luxury brands to take radical action to narrow the differenti­als. “In practice, this means they are hiking prices in key European cities and dropping them in China, but with the new currency issues in China this may no longer be possible for internatio­nal brands.” Others say the threat is exaggerate­d since the yuan had risen strongly against the euro over the past two years. “It’s not because there is a devaluatio­n of two, four or five percent that there will be consequenc­es on the luxury industry,” says Francois Godement, head of the Asia and China programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait