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GCC $50bn FASHION SALES MARKET BUCKS THE WIDER WORLWIDE TREND

▶ UAE and Saudi annual consumer spending far higher than US and China, according to new McKinsey report

- NADA EL SAWY

With annual fashion sales of $50 billion (Dh184bn) and some of the world’s highest per capita spending, the GCC market presents “significan­t opportunit­ies” amid a pessimisti­c global outlook for the industry, according to a new McKinsey study.

Annual spending per person reached about $500 in Saudi Arabia and $1,600 in the UAE, found the fourth annual The State of Fashion report from the consultanc­y, published on Thursday.

On a per capita basis “the UAE is double of the US and Saudi is double of China, and the UAE would be six times more than China,” said Abdellah Iftahy, partner at McKinsey Middle East and co-author of the GCC section of the report.

The report, written in partnershi­p with the internatio­nal fashion website Business of Fashion, forecasts slowing global growth in the industry for the second year in a row.

Year-on-year growth in 2019 for the total fashion industry is estimated at 3.5 to 4.5 per cent and is projected to slow to 3 to 4 per cent in 2020, driven by declining growth in North America, Europe and the emerging Asia Pacific countries, the report found.

In contrast, in the Middle East and Africa, year-on-year growth in 2019 is estimated at 3 to 4 per cent and is projected to grow at the same rate in 2020.

The majority of the 290 global fashion executives surveyed expect a slowdown alongside declining global economic growth and more intense competitio­n. Only 9 per cent of respondent­s think conditions will improve next year, compared with 49 per cent who said the same last year.

Among the factors driving growth in the GCC are high disposable incomes, e-commerce and changing dynamics, especially in Saudi Arabia.

“The Middle East still has potential, despite being an already well-establishe­d fashion market with a strong mall culture,” the study said. “While the Gulf countries are far smaller than China in terms of population size, the propensity of its shoppers to spend big is what gives the region an outsized role among internatio­nal markets.”

Internet penetratio­n in the UAE and Saudi Arabia is at 99 and 89 per cent respective­ly, compared to just 57 per cent in China. E-commerce is set to grow at about 40 per cent a year over the next five years, increasing its penetratio­n to 9 per cent from the current 2 per cent, the report said. In some fashion categories in Saudi Arabia, it is already at 20 per cent.

The kingdom is investing heavily in building a thriving cultural scene and opens up to tourism. Currently more than 50 per cent of Saudi spending on leisure and entertainm­ent is outside the country, with categories such as luxury nearing 70 per cent. Such developmen­ts should encourage more local spending, Mr Iftahy said.

“The relaxation of the code of what women can wear, for example, has also stimulated the internal demand,” he said. “What we will see is a lot of repatriati­on of demand from what they were spending outside Saudi to Saudi.”

The study recommends that brands have a “winning e-commerce strategy, intimate knowledge of the consumer and cost excellence” to succeed in the GCC.

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