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LUXURY GOODS SPENDING IN GULF ON TRACK FOR RECOVERY IN 2021

▶ Almost 70% of wealthy GCC buyers, who traditiona­lly shop in-store, are now comfortabl­e online

- DEENA KAMEL

Luxury goods retailers in the Gulf will experience a recovery in consumer spending in 2021 to just below pre-pandemic levels in 2019, after the market declined 17 per cent in 2020, according to Bain & Company..

Online shopping, which benefited from a massive boost during the Covid-19 pandemic, will continue to fuel growth after virus-curbing measures are removed, the management consultanc­y said in a report titled Assessing the Impact of 2020 on the GCC Luxury Goods Market.

“[Spending this year] is expected to be slightly below 2019 levels, assuming a gradual return to travel in the second and third quarters,” said report authors Cyrille Fabre and Anne-Laure Malauzat. “Much will depend on each brand’s ability to keep a large share of the luxury spending that traditiona­lly took place abroad while also convincing tourists to spend in the region.”

The luxury goods market in the Gulf declined to $7.4 billion in 2020 with countries affected by varying degrees depending on their exposure to changes in tourism flows and repatriati­on of spending, the report said.

While the pandemic-induced decline in tourism hurt the market, Gulf citizens, who usually purchase 30 to 40 per cent of their luxury goods outside the region, repatriate­d spending in their respective countries, according to Bain.

Countries that have relatively lower foreign visitor numbers, such as Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, recorded a lower drop than the UAE, where the impact was closer to the global average decline of 23 per cent last year.

“In the UAE especially, where tourists account for as much as 60 per cent of the luxury market, an undeniably large block of spending power was wiped out rapidly by ongoing Covid-19 travel restrictio­ns,” the authors said.

Jewellery benefited from a second-half rebound spurred by local customers, especially in Saudi Arabia, because of weddings, investment buying and the launch of new collection­s. Jewellery was the only luxury category to achieve value growth in 2020, albeit only a 1 per cent increase.

The lack of tourists weighed heavily on the watches segment, with Swiss watch exports to Gulf markets declining 50 per cent in volume and 20 per cent in value.

Make-up products suffered more than fragrance but the beauty category recorded an e-commerce boom as GCC residents headed online to shop.

Both tourists and locals shifted their spending toward more casual day-to-day apparel, with more shopping online and top brands that focused on local customers outperform­ing.

Almost 70 per cent of high net-worth GCC buyers, who traditiona­lly opt for in-store luxury shopping, now say they are comfortabl­e with shopping online, the report said.

The switch to e-commerce during movement restrictio­ns led several brands to report that their online sales grew by between two-fold and six-fold, Bain said.

“We anticipate that post-lockdown, e-commerce will continue to flourish as retailers and brands make large investment­s to improve the user experience, helping to fuel growth,” the report’s authors said.

Saudi Arabia will remain the biggest driver of growth for the regional luxury industry in the years ahead, the company said.

The luxury market in the kingdom is changing because of several factors, including population growth, new tastes and preference­s and the emergence of new luxury consumers, such as affluent working women, the report said.

Across the Gulf, companies that invest to make the most of these trends will become the most competitiv­e.

“The emergence of some positive shopping trends and the ongoing recovery offer hope for a return to relative normalcy in 2021 and into 2022,” the authors said.

The e-commerce switch led several brands to report that their online sales grew by between two-fold and six-fold

 ?? Sammy Dallal / The National ?? Sales of luxury watches fell 50% by volume and 20% by value in the Gulf last year as fewer tourists visited owing to travel restrictio­ns
Sammy Dallal / The National Sales of luxury watches fell 50% by volume and 20% by value in the Gulf last year as fewer tourists visited owing to travel restrictio­ns

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