No let-up in lure of luxury lines

Updated: 2013-02-25 09:36

By Liu Jie (China Daily)

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No let-up in lure of luxury lines

People lining up outside a Chanel outlet in Hong Kong. According to a report conducted by France-based market research company Ipsos, nearly half of Chinese urban women intend to buy luxury goods and more than 60 percent plan to buy bags, dresses, shoes, accessories and jewelry. [Photo / China Daily] 

But customers are now more likely to question the real value of brands

Wan Minmin bought a small Prada Saffiano bag as a Spring Festival gift to herself costing nearly 15,000 yuan ($2,401).

"It's a reward for my whole year's hard work. It's worthy," said the 30-year-old Beijing woman, adding that she plans to buy a Return to Tiffany necklace on her birthday in August.

Wan is among millions of Chinese females who still want to buy luxury items in 2013 despite rising luxury goods prices in China.

According to a report conducted by France-based market research company Ipsos, nearly half of Chinese urban women intend to buy luxury goods and more than 60 percent plan to buy bags, dresses, shoes, accessories and jewelry.

The survey, conducted during last August to October, covered 30 first to fifth-tier cities and surveyed 4,043 20- to 45-year-old women on their buying habits, relationships with brands, lifestyle, values and attitudes. The average monthly household income of these women was 15,925 yuan.

It showed that 43 percent of the respondents intend to buy some luxury products in 2013. Bags, dresses, shoes and accessories are the most popular, with 68 percent planning to buy them. A total of 66 percent want jewelry.

Wan said she believes luxury bags and jewelry reflect high quality, good lifestyle and the pursuit of perfection to her. "I especially prefer them to other classical or iconic series produced by luxury brands," she said.

Concerning the question regarding what luxury meant to a Chinese female, 42 percent of the respondents said it is high quality, 29 percent said it is expensive, 23 percent said denoted a certain lifestyle and 21 percent said it is a symbol of status.

"The Chinese are becoming mature and contemplating what is the actual meaning of luxury products in their lives," said Zhou Ting, head of the Fortune Character Institute, an organization that studies luxury purchases in China.

In another Ipsos' report, the international research firm found that Chinese women's motivation when buying luxury brands was establishing their own individual style. A total of 42 percent of the respondents - 66,000 females aged between 12 and 64 in 88 cities and rural areas - chose individuality as the primary motivation when buying luxury goods.

Other important motivations include having a sense of belonging to a group, with 19 percent selecting group sociability. As many as 21 percent said one of the motivations is pursuit of stability - avoiding risks, ensuring quality and seeking stability and comfort. Nineteen percent said keeping abreast of fashion and not being satisfied with the status quo, hunger for change and indulging themselves were also important considerations.

In other words, in China, 60 percent of the purchase of luxury brands derived from a motivation to show off as individuals and flaunt their buying power and choices, said Jessica Liu, research director of Ipsos MediaCT in Greater China.

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