Archive for ‘Consumer’

24/06/2012

* Ikea Applies for Big Indian Investment

WSJ: “Swedish housewares giant IKEA Group asked India for permission to invest €1.5 billion ($1.9 billion) in the country to set up 25 retail stores in coming years, a commitment that provides some relief for New Delhi policy makers who have been trying to boost sagging foreign-investor sentiment.

IKEA’s foray into India, made possible by a policy change last year that allowed some retailers to own 100% of their Indian units, could help transform India’s largely unorganized, $500 billion retail sector. But the company will face significant challenges, including meeting the government’s mandate that it source 30% of inventory from local small-scale industries.

IKEA, which has 290 stores in 26 countries and is known for selling affordable, modern-looking furniture and housewares, said that if the Indian government approves its application it could have a significant effect on the country’s retail sector, “vastly improving availability of high-quality, low-price products not available in India.”

The company announced its decision after its chief executive, Mikael Ohlsson, met with Indian Commerce Minister Anand Sharma on Friday at a conference in St. Petersburg, Russia.”

via Ikea Applies for Big Indian Investment – WSJ.com.

See also: Consumerism grows in India

21/06/2012

* Imagine if every resident of Mumbai had a car?

IT Decisions: “Professor Stéphane Garelli of IMD Business School and the University of Lausanne delivered one of the opening keynotes, describing the future of the world economy. One of the key points he made related to consumers in emerging economies creating ‘needs’ from what were previously ‘wants’.

“In China, everybody is buying a fridge. How many times have you bought a fridge? Once you have one then it lasts a long time before you replace it. You are living in a replacement economy where you are just upgrading what you already have. In China, you have no fridge, you want one. You have no TV set, you want one. You have no telephone, you want one…” he said.

The idea that enormous tranches of humanity are about to start consuming items they have never used before, such as cars, washing machines, fridges, and air conditioning, is a scary thought for environmental campaigners. Economic growth benefits those who are lifted from poverty, but how can the world really cope with billions of new drivers all expecting their own car?

Professor Garelli said: “The problem for the environment is that the infrastructure is not following [consumption].  For example in China, in 2020 they will buy 30m cars and only 15m will be sold in the USA. So everybody wants a car, but there are not enough roads for all of them. You need growth, you need traffic control, etc – the infrastructure has to grow in parallel.”

Professor Garelli went on to explain: “This means there is an enormous environmental impact and I think that this growth has to be checked. At a certain stage they will have to slow down some access. There are some countries where people can perhaps wait for a car – can you imagine if every single person in Mumbai has a car?”  …  “

via Imagine if every resident of Mumbai had a car? | IT Decisions.

10/06/2012

* China Passenger-Car Sales Pick Up

WSJ: “Passenger-car sales in China accelerated in May, a positive sign for the world’s second-largest economy and the largest auto market. Strong auto sales in China, a signal consumers are still buying big-ticket items, could reassure markets concerned that the country is heading for a sharp economic slowdown.

Sales in May were up 23% from a year earlier, to 1.28 million vehicles, the semiofficial industry group China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said in a statement Saturday. That’s faster than Aprils 13% pace—which was itself an encouraging turnaround from the decline in the first quarter, when sales were down 1.3% from a year earlier.”

via China Passenger-Car Sales Pick Up – WSJ.com.

One small positive indicator amongst lots of negatives.  See: https://chindia-alert.org/2012/06/10/chinese-economy-shows-a-second-month-of-anemic-growth/

26/05/2012

* Chinese fashion group has global designs

FT: “When research agency Millward Brown Optimor released rankings of the fastest growing global brands this week, at number 10 was a company that most Financial Times readers have probably never heard of: Chinese youth fashion brand Metersbonwe.

Some mainland brands are becoming household names in the west – such as Lenovo, Haier or Huawei – but they were not on the list. Instead, unknown Metersbonwe appeared, just a few slots below Apple.

Present in even the smallest Chinese cities, Metersbonwe will soon be coming to a high street near you if Zhou Chengjian, founder and chairman of the board, has his way. Within three to five years, he plans to push into the fashion markets of London, Paris, New York and Milan with his youthful and inexpensive designs.With revenue last year of Rmb10bn ($1.6bn) and net profit of Rmb1.2bn – up 32 and 59 per cent respectively year on year – Metersbonwe has done what so few other Chinese brands have been able to: outpace foreign rivals in the hyper-competitive mainland fashion market.

Millward Brown Optimor ranked Metersbonwe tenth in the world for “brand momentum” – advertising-speak for growth potential and consumer popularity. The result was based entirely on the company’s performance in China, where Euromonitor says Shenzhen-listed Metersbonwe is the third-largest apparel brand by sales behind Nike and Anta, a local sportswear brand. Even China’s economic slowdown seems not to be dimming the company’s lustre: Metersbonwe is predicting a 20 per cent rise in revenues and net profit this year, with sales so far appearing recession-proof.

The Metersbonwe story embodies the phrase “rags to riches”. Mr Chengjian, 46, who created the company 17 years ago, started out as a penniless tailor. Now he is the second richest person in Shanghai – a city of the stunningly wealthy – with a fortune of nearly $5bn, according to the latest Hurun rich list. A peasant from a tiny village in coastal Zhejiang province, he says he was no good at school, did not enjoy working in the sun and rain on construction sites, but did like the soft feel of fabric under his fingers so became a tailor. “My dream is to be the world’s tailor,” he told the FT in an interview this week, in an office decorated with posters of Chinese leaders Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. His staff say he reveres Mao because he “made China free” and Deng because he “made China open”.

Mr Zhou says there is no particular secret to his success, apart from keeping his head amid all the fabulous opportunities for making money. “I work very hard and China is developing very fast,” he said. “Other Chinese companies dabble in too many things. But we set out 10 years ago to focus only on fashion.” He created a downmarket version of H&M and Zara, targeting college students and recent graduates, with a brand that many think is European.

Although Mr Zhou claims Metersbonwe was first a Mandarin name, many of its shops carry most prominently only the English transliteration, an obvious attempt to appeal to Chinese consumers who equate foreign brands with better style and quality.

“They did the right thing at the right time,” says Wu Xiaobo, dean of the school of management of Zhejiang University, who points out that Metersbonwe was the first garment company in China to adopt the international practice of outsourcing all manufacturing. …

With international retailers beating a path to China to make money, why is Mr Zhou so intent on launching overseas? In his typically earthy way, Mr Zhou says he is like a frog in boiling water, where the water is the increasingly competitive Chinese fashion scene. If he hangs around too long, he will die; there is no alternative but to jump out while there is still time – to become a household name around the world.”

via Chinese fashion group has global designs – FT.com.

Related posts: 

21/05/2012

* What the Chinese want

This is a much longer than usual post.  But if you are interested in either Chinese mentalilty or, more importantly, thinking of trading in China, this is a must read.

Consumers in China are increasingly modern in their tastes, but they are not becoming ‘Western.’ How the selling of coffee, cars and pizza sheds light on a nation racing toward superpower status.

By TOM DOCTOROFF, author of the book “What Chinese Want: Culture, Communism & The Modern Chinese Consumer.”

Apple has taken China by storm. A Starbucks can be found on practically every major street corner in coastal cities and beyond. From Nike to Buick to Siemens, Chinese consumers actively prefer Western brands over their domestic competitors. The rise of microbloggers, the popularity of rock bands with names like Hutong Fist and Catcher in the Rye, and even the newfound popularity of Christmas all seem to point toward a growing Westernization.

But don’t be deceived by appearances. Consumers in China aren’t becoming “Western.” They are increasingly modern and international, but they remain distinctly Chinese. If I’ve learned anything from my 20 years working as an advertising executive in China, it is that successful Western brands craft their message here to be “global,” not “foreign”—so that they can become vessels of Chinese culture.

Understanding China’s consumer culture is a good starting point for understanding the nation itself, as it races toward superpower status. Though the country’s economy and society are evolving rapidly, the underlying cultural blueprint has remained more or less constant for thousands of years. China is a Confucian society, a quixotic combination of top-down patriarchy and bottom-up social mobility. Citizens are driven by an ever-present conflict between standing out and fitting in, between ambition and regimentation. In Chinese society, individuals have no identity apart from obligations to, and acknowledgment by, others. The clan and nation are the eternal pillars of identity. Western individualism—the idea of defining oneself independent of society—doesn’t exist.

Various youth subtribes intermittently bubble to the surface—see the recent rise of “vegetable males” (Chinese metrosexuals) and “Taobao maniacs” (aficionados of the auction website Taobao). But self-expression is generally frowned upon, and societal acknowledgment is still tantamount to success. Liberal arts majors are considered inferior to graduates with engineering or accounting degrees. Few dare to see a psychologist for fear of losing “face”—the respect or deference of others—or being branded sick. Failure to have a child is a grave disappointment.

The speed with which China’s citizens have embraced all things digital is one sign that things are in motion in the country. But e-commerce, which has changed the balance of power between retailers and consumers, didn’t take off until the Chinese need for reassurance was satisfied. Even when transactions are arranged online, most purchases are completed in person, with shoppers examining the product and handing over their cash offline.

Even digital self-expression needs to be safe, cloaked in anonymity. Social networking sites such as Sina Weibo (a Chinese version of Twitter), Renren and Kaixing Wang (Chinese versions of Facebook) have exploded. But users hide behind avatars and pseudonyms. A survey conducted by the advertising firm JWT, where I work, and IAC, the Internet holding company, found that less than a third of young Americans agreed with the statement “I feel free to do and say things [online] I wouldn’t do or say offline,” and 41% disagreed. Among Chinese respondents, 73% agreed, and just 9% disagreed.

Chinese at all socioeconomic levels try to “win”—that is, climb the ladder of success—while working within the system, not against it. In Chinese consumer culture, there is a constant tension between self-protection and displaying status. This struggle explains the existence of two seemingly conflicting lines of development. On the one hand, we see stratospheric savings rates, extreme price sensitivity and aversion to credit-card interest payments. On the other, there is the Chinese fixation with luxury goods and a willingness to pay as much as 120% of one’s yearly income for a car.

Every day, the Chinese confront shredded social safety nets, a lack of institutions that protect individual wealth, contaminated food products and myriad other risks to home and health. The instinct of consumers to project status through material display is counterbalanced by conservative buying behavior. Protective benefits are the primary consideration for consumers. Even high-end paints must establish their lack of toxicity before touting the virtues of colorful self-expression. Safety is a big concern for all car buyers, at either end of the price spectrum.

To win a following among Chinese buyers, brands have to follow three rules.

First and most important, products that are consumed in public, directly or indirectly, command huge price premiums relative to goods used in private. The leading mobile phone brands are international. The leading household appliance brands, by contrast, are cheaply priced domestic makers such as TCL, Changhong and Little Swan. According to a study by the U.K.-based retailer B&Q, the average middle-class Chinese spends only $15,000 to fit out a completely bare 1,000-square-foot apartment.

Luxury items are desired more as status investments than for their inherent beauty or craftsmanship. The Chinese are now the world’s most avid luxury shoppers, at least if trips abroad to cities like Hong Kong and Paris are taken into account. According to Global Refund, a company specializing in tax-free shopping for tourists, the Chinese account for 15% of all luxury items purchased in France but less than 2% of its visitors.

Public display is also a critical consideration in how global brands are repositioning themselves to attract Chinese consumers. Despite China’s tea culture, Starbucks successfully established itself as a public venue in which professional tribes gather to proclaim their affiliation with the new-generation elite. Both Pizza Hut and Häagen Dazs have built mega-franchises in China rooted in out-of-home consumption. (The $5 carton of vanilla to be eaten at home is a tough sell in China.)

The second rule is that the benefits of a product should be external, not internal. Even for luxury goods, celebrating individualism—with familiar Western notions like “what I want” and “how I feel”—doesn’t work in China. Automobiles need to make a statement about a man on his way up. BMW, for example, has successfully fused its global slogan of the “ultimate driving machine” with a Chinese-style declaration of ambition.

Sometimes the difference between internal versus external payoffs can be quite subtle. Spas and resorts do better when they promise not only relaxation but also recharged batteries. Infant formulas must promote intelligence, not happiness. Kids aren’t taken to Pizza Hut so that they can enjoy pizza; they are rewarded with academic “triumph feasts.” Beauty products must help a woman “move forward.” Even beer must do something. In Western countries, letting the good times roll is enough; in China, pilsner must bring people together, reinforce trust and promote mutual financial gain.

Emotional payoffs must be practical, even in matters of the heart. Valentine’s Day is almost as dear to the Chinese as the Lunar New Year, but they view it primarily as an opportunity for men to demonstrate their worthiness and commitment. In the U.S., De Beers’s slogan, “A Diamond is Forever,” glorifies eternal romance. In China, the same tagline connotes obligation, a familial covenant—rock solid, like the stone itself.

The last rule for positioning a brand in China is that products must address the need to navigate the crosscurrents of ambition and regimentation, of standing out while fitting in. Men want to succeed without violating the rules of the game, which is why wealthier individuals prefer Audis or BMWs over flashy Maseratis.

Luxury buyers want to demonstrate mastery of the system while remaining understated, hence the appeal of Mont Blanc’s six-point logo or Bottega Veneta’s signature cross weave—both conspicuously discreet. Young consumers want both stylishness and acceptance, so they opt for more conventionally hip fashion brands like Converse and Uniqlo.

Chinese parents are drawn to brands promising “stealthy learning” for their children: intellectual development masked as fun. Disney will succeed more as an educational franchise—its English learning centers are going gangbusters—than as a theme park. McDonald’s restaurants, temples of childhood delight in the West, have morphed into scholastic playgrounds in China: Happy Meals include collectible Snoopy figurines wearing costumes from around the world, while the McDonald’s website, hosted by Professor Ronald, offers Happy Courses for multiplication. Skippy peanut butter combines “delicious peanut taste” and “intelligent sandwich preparation.”

Even China’s love affair with Christmas—with big holiday sales and ubiquitous seasonal music, even in Communist Party buildings—advances a distinctly Chinese agenda. Santa is a symbol of progress; he represents the country’s growing comfort with a new global order, one into which it is determined to assimilate, without sacrificing the national interest. The holiday has become a way to project status in a culture in which individual identity is inextricably linked to external validation.

The American dream—wealth that culminates in freedom—is intoxicating for the Chinese. But whereas Americans dream of “independence,” Chinese crave “control” of their own destiny and command over the vagaries of daily life. Material similarities between Chinese and Americans mask fundamentally different emotional impulses. If Western brands can learn to meet China’s worldview on its own terms, perhaps the West as a whole can too.”

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303360504577408493723814210.html?mod=WSJ_hp_mostpop_read

19/05/2012

* Hitching his Starwood to China

China Daily: “CEO of one of world’s biggest five-star chains says future is written in Chinese.

When Frits van Paasschen first visited China as a backpacker, staying in basic accommodation and traveling on crowded buses and trains, little did he imagine that two decades later, he would be returning as the boss of a five-star hotel chain. The senior executive retains vivid memories of those days, traveling the length and breadth of the country and leaving via the Karakoram Highway from China to Pakistan, clinging precariously to the roof of a pick-up truck.

Nowadays, van Paasschen flies business class on regular visits to China from his New York head office – and stays in the luxury properties of the St Regis, Westin, Sheraton and Le Mridien hotels that make up the Starwood portfolio.Van Paasschen is president and CEO of Starwood, one of the largest hotel management groups in the world which is adding to its China portfolio at a phenomenal rate: this year alone will see 23 new properties open – roughly one every fortnight – bringing the total to 100.

The country is considered to be so important that last year the boss flew the entire senior management team to China for a months visit; executive meetings were held wherever they happened to be on their grand China tour. “If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a visit is worth ten thousand,” says van Paasschen.  …

“Literally one of the high points was being on the top floor of what will be the St Regis in Shenzhen on the 100th floor of that building, looking out and toward Hong Kong and seeing that the Shenzhen side looks snazzier and more well developed than the New Territories of Hong Kong.

“When I am asked about the future I say I can’t read it, it is written in Chinese!  …

via Hitching his Starwood to China|Last Word|chinadaily.com.cn.

07/05/2012

* Lenovo Reaches Beyond PC Business

WSJ: “Personal-computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. said Monday that it plans to spend about $800 million on a new base to house the development, production and sale of mobile products as the Chinese company tries to expand beyond its core PC business.

Lenovo Ideapad U8 MID example

Lenovo Ideapad U8 MID example (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Lenovo, the world’s second-largest PC maker, said in a written statement on Monday that the five-billion-yuan facility, in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, will have several thousand employees, mainly focused on smartphones, tablet computers and other mobile devices for China and global markets. The company estimates total revenue from the base will reach 10 billion yuan $1.59 billion by 2014, and increase to 50 billion yuan within the next five years. The facility is expected to begin operations in October 2013.

Now, the company is making a mobile-devices push. The investment represents the company’s latest effort to break into new product categories as PC sales lag behind demand for mobile devices, including smartphones and tablets. Lenovo created a business unit last year called the Mobile Internet Digital Home group to focus on developing smartphones, tablets and Internet-connected smart television sets that can communicate with the mobile devices.”

via Lenovo Reaches Beyond PC Business – WSJ.com.

See also: Chinese innovation

07/05/2012

* Foreign firms bullish about Chinese economy

China Daily: “Germany looking more to China than Europe for overseas investment

Germany has always been the cornerstone of the European economy but Europe is not as important to Germany as it used to be.

For the first time China has become German companies top foreign investment destination, totaling $1.36 billion by the end of last year, according to a survey by the Association of German Chambers of Industry and Commerce. The amount was more than the combined German investment in France, Spain and Italy.

The profound shift is visible in the case of Knauf Gips KG, a German-headquartered plasterboard manufacturer.When asked what helped turn the family-owned workshop into the world’s second-largest gypsum board maker, Mark Norris, the company’s China chief executive officer, said one particular factor stands out – China. After its entry into the Chinese market in the 1990s, Knauf built three plants in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. The initial investment soon gave Knauf a solid foothold in the country’s dry-wall market. Norris said he was quite bullish about the future and remained committed to continuing investment, despite decelerating economic growth in China, compounded by the European crisis and stagnation in the United States. “In relative terms, China remains a dynamic growth engine compared with places like Spain and Greece, where there is absolutely no growth,” he said. “And people seem to forget that the market is so big, the demand for good quality is there.” As we noticed over the past five years, a mid-to-upper class has emerged and the quality of life is increasing. People are prepared to pay for green building materials. Even though its not comparable to the European or US standard, it is catching up quick.””

via Foreign firms bullish about economy[1]|chinadaily.com.cn.

03/05/2012

* China’s Bright Food buys Weetabix

Reuters: “China’s Bright Food will take control of breakfast cereal maker Weetabix, beloved by generations of British children, in the biggest foreign acquisition by a Chinese food group.

State-owned Bright Food has agreed to buy a 60 percent stake in a deal which puts a value of 1.2 billion pounds $1.94 billion, including debt, on the private-equity owned company that coined the slogan “Have you had your Weetabix today?”

The Shanghai-based group has been on the acquisition trail, seeking to raise its profile and cater for its rapidly growing home market. Weetabix is its second foreign purchase in a year and its first in Europe after other deals fell through. Eighty-year-old Weetabix is Britain’s second biggest maker of breakfast cereals and cereal bars after Kellogg. Its brands include Alpen muesli and Ready Break as well as Weetabix, which lays claim to being Britain’s No. 1 breakfast cereal for under-5s and is made from wheat grown within 50 miles 80 km of its base in southern England.

“As China’s leading food group, we are pleased to become the controlling shareholder of Weetabix,” Bright Food chairman Wang Zhongnan said in a statement on Thursday. “Weetabix has an excellent product portfolio, including leading British cereal brand Weetabix and other category-leading brands. “Private equity owners Lion Capital and Weetabix management will keep a 40 percent stake. The quintessentially British breakfast cereal group was founded in 1932 by the secretive George family and soon producing its iconic bricks of wheat. It was bought by a private equity firm in 2004.

Bright Food now sees a big opportunity for Weetabix in China, where breakfast is a very important meal and there is a trend towards healthy eating.The group, which makes “White Rabbit” candy, bought majority stakes in Australias Manassen Foods and New Zealands Synlait Milk over the past two years.”

via UPDATE 2-Chinas Bright Food buys Weetabix | Reuters.

Related post: https://chindia-alert.org/2012/02/13/pattern-of-chinese-overseas-investments/

01/05/2012

* High-end Chinese brands coming soon

Luxury-brands

China Daily: “As foreign luxury brands compete to carve out portions of China’s fast-growing market, experts are predicting that Chinese companies will soon develop luxury brands of their own.

It is time for domestic enterprises to establish luxury brands, since China has already become the dominant driver of growth in the luxury sector, said Zhou Ting, executive director of the research center for luxury goods and services at the University of International Business and Economics. The sales volume of Chinas luxury market was 11.5 billion euros $15 billion in 2011, a year-on-year growth of 25 percent, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers International Ltd.

Potential domestic luxury brands could come from some traditional Chinese industries, including liquor, tea, porcelain and silk, said Yang Qingshan, a guest researcher of luxury goods and services at UIBE. The research center listed 10 domestic brands with the potential to become luxury brands in its luxury report in November. Three liquor brands – Moutai, Wuliangye and Langjiu – are among the 10 brands. Zhuyeqing tea and some clothing brands, such as NE-Tiger and Shanghai Tang, are also on the list.”Many traditional Chinese products already have a feature of luxury because of their heritage,” Yang said.”

via High-end Chinese brands coming soon|Economy|chinadaily.com.cn.

Law of Unintended Consequences

continuously updated blog about China & India

ChiaHou's Book Reviews

continuously updated blog about China & India

What's wrong with the world; and its economy

continuously updated blog about China & India