China's Hottest Stock Rockets 370% on Craze for Collectibles
China's Hottest Stock Rockets 370% on Craze for Collectibles · Bloomberg

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) -- In a Vanity Fair video last month, Lisa, a member of mega K-pop band Blackpink, shared her obsession with toys from Chinese company Pop Mart International Group Ltd.

Most Read from Bloomberg

“I go crazy. It’s like I spent all my money,” she laughed, unboxing dolls from the toymaker’s PUCKY Roly Poly Kitty series. “I go to Pop Mart everywhere. If I fly to New York, I try to find Pop Mart there. Paris, you know, everywhere. (It’s) kind of like finding treasure.”

Lisa isn’t the only one clamoring for Pop Mart’s toys. This year, the Beijing-based company has turned from an in-the-know favorite among China’s Gen Z to a global phenomenon. In the US and Australia, fans have reportedly queued for hours, sometimes in the middle of the night, for new releases. Stores have popped up in the cities including Paris, Milan and New York. Overseas sales have jumped fivefold.

Fervor for its wide-ranging toys has turned Pop Mart into the hottest Chinese growth company, with shares up 368% this year, trouncing most members on the MSCI China Index. It also beat global peers like Walt Disney Co. and Hello Kitty’s parent company Sanrio Co Ltd. The firm reported domestic sales that grew at least 55% in the September quarter from the same period a year earlier, while overseas sales surged more than 400%.

“Pop Mart is likely the first homegrown Chinese consumer brand to achieve significant global success by attracting consumers via intellectual property, design and products, rather than pricing,” Morgan Stanley analysts including Dustin Wei wrote in a note. He called the company a “global brand in the making.”

Pop Mart often sells its dolls inside a blind box, which means the consumer doesn’t know what specific character is inside until they open it. Their novelty lies in its situational, character-driven designs that fans value for their emotional appeal. Take the retailer’s signature character Molly, a short-haired girl with a constant pout. She can appear as Space Molly, an astronaut traveling through the universe, or Baby Molly, depicting her as a three-year old toddler. For overseas markets, the company creates tailor-made designs such as a Mona Lisa-like monster on sale at its Louvre store in Paris.

The toys typically start retailing at 69 yuan ($9.50), while bigger, limited edition ones can sell for a couple thousand yuan. There are also active gray markets on Chinese apps and e-commerce platforms in Southeast Asia, where popular and rare dolls sell at several times their original prices.