China to the Rescue

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LONDON — In a year plagued by COVID-19, China as the world’s largest luxury market has shown great resilience and delivered promising results for those brands that got their China strategy right.

From continuous price hikes, record-breaking tallies, global collection debuts to dazzling physical events, digital viewings and livesteaming selling, luxury brands have made headlines on a daily basis throughout 2020 in the country. This not only offered hope for the suffering industry but also provided a reality check for those who fail to tackle the market.

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Back in January, the first sign of the severity of the virus for the fashion industry was the absence of Chinese designers, editors, buyers, celebrities and influencers during the fall 2020 fashion weeks, as travel restrictions were imposed by the U.S., the U.K., Italy and France to prevent the coronavirus from spreading.

While travel bans didn’t do much to stop the global spread of the virus, the health crisis in China was contained by early April, and the country began to show signs that it would become the sole source of growth for many while the rest of the world entered various levels of lockdowns.

The fashion and leather goods division at LVMH posted growth of more than 65 percent in China in the second quarter, while Kering said sales in mainland China rose more than 40 percent in the same period. China also bolstered Compagnie Financière Richemont’s performance, with sales in the region up 78 percent at actual rates in the first half of the year ended Sept. 30.

According to Bain, the luxury goods market in mainland China will likely achieve 48 percent growth in 2020, reaching nearly 346 billion renminbi, or $52.8 billion, doubling the country’s overall share of the global luxury market this year.

Livestreaming Fad

Retailers big and small embraced China’s widely available technology tools to stay connected with their customers.

The Alibaba-owned Intime Retail, one of the nation’s largest high-end retailers with tenants ranging from Cartier to Lane Crawford, saw online business quadruple and revenue bounce back to normal in May thanks to livestreaming, free shipping, as well as a series of campaigns and sales initiatives.

Some 5,000 sales associates from Intime’s store registered as livestreamers to host around 200 sessions daily on Taobao Live during the height of the outbreak to engage with and acquire new users.

Intime introduced free shipping for all in-app purchases and partnered with Cainiao, Alibaba’s logistics network, to help cover deliveries within a 10-kilometer radius of any store location, to further encourage online spending.