日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

A China foothold for luxury shoes

Updated: 2010-06-15 06:41

By Emma An(HK Edition)

  Print Mail Large Medium  Small

A China foothold for luxury shoes

Don't be surprised when you find people these days on the mainland wearing an ever greater variety of brands whose origin they know little about and whose names they find impossible to pronounce.

Brands like LV, Chanel and Gucci that we cannot be more familiar with are no longer what luxury is all about. More and more Italian and French brands like Salvatore Ferragamo and Versace, which were basically unknown to mainland shoppers previously, have been making big strides here and are gaining popularity on a daily basis.

"It is just unbelievable," exclaimed Salvatore Ferragamo's CEO Michele Norsa on the company's achievements in the mainland market.

The company's Tsimshatui store in Kowloon overtook its New York store last month as Salvatore Ferragamo's champion store worldwide in terms of sales volume, Norsa told China Daily in an exclusive interview.

The city's retailers, particularly luxury goods vendors, have generally been reporting phenomenal sales growth in recent years as flocks of wealthy mainland tourists visit the city.

"The Chinese people are not just buying Ferragamo here. You'll find the Chinese buying Ferragamo anywhere else in the world. In New York, Italy, the Bahamas...aside from Hong Kong, already a world-class luxury goods capital, the mainland market is too important for us," said Norsa.

Sales volume in Ferragamo's mainland stores registered positive growth even in the toughest period of 2009 when the more mature luxury markets like the US and Japan saw negative growth, he said.

Salvatore Ferragamo, an Italian luxury brand most well-known for its footwear, declared an all-out war around five years ago to conquer what CEO Norsa calls tomorrow's No 1 luxury consumer - China.

Although Salvatore Ferragamo is among the earliest of luxury brands to plant its foot and shoes in China, with its very first store having opened in Hong Kong 20 years ago, its presence on the mainland has not been long-established, with only a few stores scattered in Beijing and Shanghai at the start some four years ago.

The company has so far opened 41 stores on the mainland, mostly in the past three years, the fastest expansion in the company's history, Norsa said.

People in the luxury industry, said Norsa, love to make projections for the future. However, such rapid growth of the Chinese luxury goods market was nowhere among his market projections three years ago. In the short intervening time, China has become the third-largest luxury market after the US and Japan, but "the potential is unlimited," said Norsa, adding that he is convinced that in less than five years China will become the No 1 luxury consumer market in the world.

According to a report by Bain & Company, a China-based management consulting firm, the Chinese luxury market recorded a turnover of approximately $9.6 billion in 2009, up from $2 billion in 2004 as indicated by a separate 2004 report released by McKinsey & Company, implying a 20 percent year-on-year growth in the country's luxury goods market.

Norsa is not alone in making that prediction. Ernst & Yung was even more precise in predicting that ownership of the title of champion for China would be achieved as soon as 2015.

"The rapidly rising economies like China and India are where the future of the fashion industry lies," he said.

China Daily

(HK Edition 06/15/2010 page3)

主站蜘蛛池模板: 欧美日韩在线观看成人 | 看av在线 | 久久黄色一级 | 亚洲天堂精品在线 | 成人a级片 | 久久精品二区 | 日韩91视频 | 成人免费看片视频在线观看 | 亚洲国产精品女人久久久 | 偷拍欧美亚洲 | av一区三区| 日韩精品一二三四区 | 波多野结衣加勒比 | 免费视频中文字幕 | 亚洲精品高清在线观看 | 国产 欧美 精品 | 狠狠操在线 | 97在线精品视频 | 成人小视频免费在线观看 | 悠悠色综合 | 一本到av| 亚洲一区二区观看 | 黄色av一区二区三区 | 成人在线免费看 | 少妇av片在线观看 | 亚洲色中色 | 日本一二三区在线视频 | 狠狠综合 | 毛片av网址| 国产美女精品 | 大香蕉毛片 | 婷婷久久综合 | 欧美一区不卡 | 国产成人久久久 | 成人av免费网站 | 99热免费观看 | 国产精品2018 | 欧美性一区 | 狠狠淫| 日本91在线 | 日韩午夜免费 |