Jimmy Choo plans huge China expansion

October 01, 2011

BEIJING, Oct 1 Jimmy Choo founder Tamara Mellon said the upscale shoemaker hopes to open up to 50 stores in China over the next five years in what she dubbed an exciting market for high-end goods.

China is the worlds fastest-growing market for luxury products and an ongoing economic boom is creating new dollar billionaires every year in a huge explosion in wealth.

A shopper peers through the window of the Jimmy Choo store on Bond Street, London. The British company plans to open 30 stores in China by 2016. AFP pic
Jimmy Choo currently has just two shops in China one in Beijing and another in Shanghai. A third will open at the end of the year in the eastern city of Nanjing, said Mellon, the shoemakers chief creative officer.

Our (China) business has increased 100 per cent (in terms of profits) in the last year on the existing locations we have, said Mellon, who was in Beijing as part of a British delegation to the Chinese capitals first design festival.

She said the British firm whose shoes cost anywhere from US$300 (RM930) to US$1,600 would open at least 30 stores in China by 2016. But the potential over the next five years could be up to 50, she told AFP.

In comparison, Jimmy Choo has just 40 stores across the United States.

Forbes magazine said earlier this month that China had a total of 146 billionaires this year up 14 per cent from 2010, and second only to the United States with 413.

The brokerage firm CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets said in January that China would account for 44 per cent of worldwide sales of luxury goods by 2020 bigger than the entire global market is now.

Mellon said that many of Chinas rich were only in their 30s and 40s relatively young compared with other markets.

The wealth here is... very young, which is great because they love luxury, they love fashion,! so this is a very exciting market.

She said that consumers of luxury products have also changed over the past few years.

What we found a few years ago was that... men were making money, men were buying brands, they were shopping. Mens brands did phenomenally well much sooner than womens brands, she said.

Now, there are a lot more women who are working and who are shopping. The market is really taking off now. AFP-Relaxnews


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