China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Value of top 100 Chinese brands surges in new ranking

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Brand value of Chinese firms, especially those from the technology, education and logistics sectors, have seen a sharp surge in the latest ranking released on Monday.

The brand value of the top 100 Chinese brands this year achieved a record growth of 23 percent from $557.1 billion a year ago to $683.9 billion in 2018, representi­ng the greatest annual growth since WPP and Kantar Millward Brown’s 2018 BrandZ™ Top 100 Most Valuable Chinese Brands ranking was first released in 2014.

Logistics brands entered the BrandZ China rankings for the first time as a category, with the largest SF Express coming in at No 11, reflecting the rise of e-commerce and the increase in package delivery volumes in the country.

“More sophistica­ted in their purchasing decisions, consumers are responding to brands that grab their attention and meet their needs in relevant ways with products and services that are both innovative and different,” said David Roth, CEO for Europe, the Middle East and Africa and Asia at The Store WPP, the group’s global retail practice.

The game is changing for brands that want to compete successful­ly in China. They are expected to pursue a higher purpose, one that improves the lives of the Chinese people, helps drive greater economic equality and strengthen­s the nation, he added.

According to the report, China has become one of the most competitiv­e markets in the world, with market-driven brands seeing a phenomenal increase of 271 percent in value over the past five years. The BrandZ China Top 100 has grown by 80 percent over the past five years, outpacing the BrandZ Global Top 100’s 27 percent growth.

The competitiv­e landscape for Chinese brands meant some brands were unable to maintain their rankings within the Top 100. In China, 28 brands had exited the BrandZ China Top 100 rankings over the past five years, versus 17 from the Global Top 100, it said.

Technology giant Tencent has retained the coveted title of China’s most valuable brand for the fourth consecutiv­e year, achieving a brand value of $132.2 billion, a 25 percent year-on-year increase.

“Tencent has benefitted greatly from the rapid developmen­t and massive opportunit­ies of China’s digitaliza­tion,” said Seng Yee Lau, chairman of Tencent Advertisin­g.

“Technology has become an integral part of our everyday lives. Now the final piece of the jigsaw is ready to be put into place and a completely digital China will emerge,” Lau said.

China’s largest e-commerce company Alibaba has continued to grow at an exceptiona­l rate, growing 53 percent yearon-year to achieve a brand value of $88.6 billion.

The BrandZ report combines financial data with consumer opinions gathered from interviews with over 400,000 Chinese consumers to give a dollar value to how brands power business.

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