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    Borders Reopen, But Will China’s Luxury Watch Buyers Return To Old Habits?

    Narrowing cross-border price differentials and increasing efforts by brands to engage watch aficionados are boosting China's demand for luxury timepieces to new highs.
    Narrowing cross-border price differentials and increasing efforts by brands to engage watch aficionados are boosting China's demand for luxury timepieces to new highs. Photo: Jaeger-LeCoultre
    Shilpa DhamijaAuthor
      Published   in Hard Luxury

    Despite long pandemic-induced lockdowns, mainland China and Hong Kong together were the world’s leading importers of Swiss watches last year, according to the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry. The two markets imported some 4.9 billion (CHF 4.47 billion) worth of Swiss timepieces in total, eclipsing the next biggest importer, the US, at 4.4 billion (CHF 3.9 billion).

    Travel restrictions didn’t deter personal luxury buyers in China from spending, but they did force them to purchase domestically.

    Bulgari’s watch division saw sales climb in mainland China over the intermittent lockdowns, Antoine Pin, global managing director of Bulgari’s watch division, an LVMH brand, tells Jing Daily.

    “We had our inland networks already in place,” he says. Domestic purchases clearly counterbalanced (overseas) travel retail losses. It wasn’t one for one, but there was a clear shift.”

    Watch prices converging#

    Consumers in China are used to shopping abroad and assessing price differentials, which are the result of taxes and companies’ pricing strategies. But now, they are motivated to purchase domestically in part due to the globalization of watch prices.

    “Right now, globally, we have a consistent price strategy. If you buy a watch outside of China, the only difference is the tax,” says Vanessa Yuan, managing director, China, at Jaeger-LeCoultre, a luxury watch brand under the Richemont umbrella. “In the past, one of the obvious advantages for Chinese buyers buying outside the country was the price difference.”

    Not only are companies aligning prices, the tax burden is falling.

    “In the last few years, China’s import tax on luxury watches has gradually fallen from 35 percent to 8-12 percent. Ten years ago, the price difference between China and Paris was very high. Now, it isn’t,” says Nicolas Luchsinger, president of Van Cleef & Arpels, Asia-Pacific.

    Localization in motion#

    But now that borders are open, will buyers return to their past purchase patterns, even if the price gap has narrowed?

    “We don’t have a strategy to encourage the Chinese to buy in China or abroad,” says Luchsinger. “The reality is that Chinese consumers are dreaming of traveling and will travel. But with the network that we have built in China, our business will still grow here.”

    Still, brands are keen to better engage Chinese consumers on their home turf and have rolled out initiatives like specialized boutiques and enhanced client engagement functions to do just that.

    Jaeger-LeCoultre opened its first flagship in China at Shanghai’s K11 mall in January 2022 with an eye on improving consumer engagement and creating experiences that resonate with Chinese shoppers.

    “The store is no longer just a point of sales, but also a point of experience for our clients to deep dive into the fine-watch-making spirit and education,” says Yuan.

    Jaeger-LeCoultre created a tiger-themed art installation to mark the grand opening of its flagship store at Shanghai K11 in 2022. Photo: Jaeger-LeCoultre
    Jaeger-LeCoultre created a tiger-themed art installation to mark the grand opening of its flagship store at Shanghai K11 in 2022. Photo: Jaeger-LeCoultre

    These localization efforts include soon-to-be-launched special limited edition (non-zodiac) watches, exclusively for the brand’s China boutiques.

    Over the past three years, luxury watch brands have striven to build deeper, on-the-ground relationships with their mainland China customers — efforts that will benefit not just the brands, but also mainland-based horology connoisseurs, argues Luchsinger.

    “If a Chinese buyer wants a limited edition piece, there is a better chance of the buyer getting that watch in China than in Paris, because they have a relationship with the sales associate here,” says Hong Kong-based Luchsinger. “If the buyer goes to Paris to a store where no one knows him or her, there is little chance of them obtaining the desired watch.”

    Van Cleef amp; Arpels welcomed the Year of the Rabbit with the Lady Duo de Lapins watch. Photo: Van Cleef amp; Arpels
    Van Cleef amp; Arpels welcomed the Year of the Rabbit with the Lady Duo de Lapins watch. Photo: Van Cleef amp; Arpels

    Wooing China globally#

    As international travel retail businesses welcome the return of China’s big spenders, luxury watch brands are pulling out the stops to amplify their reach and improve their merchandising there.

    Jaeger-LeCoultre, for one, plans to open another boutique in the mainland in the near future.

    “The majority of our business is new clients. So it’s important to continue building the desirability of the brand within China,” says Yuan.

    Meanwhile, Bulgari aims to expand and balance its footprint in the mainland so that it is akin to the brand’s footprint in the US, as both countries have a comparable coverage area.

    “We cannot have 100 stores in China, but we are trying to find a balance in the development of our footprint," Pin explains. "If you look at the dimensions of the country, we’ll reach a distribution structure that will be quite similar to the US, ie. the same density or footprint of stores between the two markets. The same distance to the stores for average people in these markets.”

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