Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月17日
50 million people have stopped buying luxury brands like Dior and Burberry after ‘broken promises’ to customers
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奢侈品行业正面临增长放缓的挑战,Bain预计仅有三分之一的品牌将在今年实现正增长。为了应对挑战,品牌需要重新评估其价值主张,尤其要满足Z世代不断增长的期望。消费者对价格上涨和创新不足感到不满,导致奢侈品巨头业绩不及预期。中国市场需求下降也对行业造成冲击,预计整个奢侈品行业将在2024年全年下降2%。然而,旅游、美酒佳肴和汽车等领域仍保持着适度增长,预计2025年底中国、欧洲、美国和日本市场将逐步复苏。

🤔 **奢侈品行业增长放缓:** Bain预测2023年仅有三分之一的奢侈品牌能实现正增长,相比去年下降了一半,凸显出行业面临的巨大挑战。

💰 **消费者对价格和创新不满:** 消费者对于奢侈品价格持续上涨,但创新、服务、质量和吸引力却未同步提升感到不满,导致部分品牌业绩下滑,例如Michael Kors品牌就面临“品牌疲劳”问题。

🇨🇳 **中国市场需求下降:** 中国市场曾是奢侈品增长的主要驱动力,但受通货膨胀和消费者信心下降的影响,中国市场需求出现显著下降,导致LVMH等品牌收入下滑。

🌍 **全球经济环境影响消费:** 受到全球经济环境的影响,许多“渴望”奢侈品的消费者变得更加谨慎,将支出优先用于金融投资或其他更重要的领域。

📈 **未来市场预测:** 尽管2024年奢侈品行业整体预计下降2%,但旅游、美酒佳肴和汽车等领域仍保持增长,预计2025年底中国、欧洲、美国和日本市场将逐步复苏。

Only a third of luxury brands will end the year with positive growth, Bain posited, down from two-thirds last year.Looking ahead, it said that to stay alive, brands need to reevaluate their value proposition—mainly for Gen Zers—and keep meeting their growing expectations. As for how? Marie Driscoll, an equity analyst focused on luxury retail, told Fortune that reinvention is key. “Get back to books, make products more inspirational, make the shopping experience marvelous,” Driscoll said. “You need to constantly meet consumers at a new angle and surprise and delight them.”“A fabulous ice cream sundae is boring by the time you have it the fifth time,” Driscoll added.Broken promises to shoppersOn some level, brands have broken their promises to consumers, Driscoll said. “Since 2019, there’s been a high price increase across luxury without a corresponding increase in innovation, service, quality, or appeal that a luxury brand should provide,” Driscoll added. “This year, that really hit consumers, and we felt the full impact.”It perhaps explains why the luxury powerhouses, including LVMH (which owns Dior and Louis Vuitton), Burberry, and Kering (owner of YSL and Gucci), missed revenue targets this year. In fact, LVMH was dethroned as Europe’s most valuable company in September 2023 by Novo Nordisk, the maker of Ozempic.Customers—beyond being hamstrung by eye-popping prices with which their salaries rarely keep pace—are likely growing unimpressed by the products these high-end brands have to offer.Some more than others. Michael Kors, founder of his namesake brand, said during New York Fashion Week in September that he’s struggling with “brand fatigue” in an effort to explain 14% year-over-year revenue drops, pointing his finger at fast fashion and social media influencers keeping up with trends much, much faster.“The luxury consumer wants something that is rare, unique, bespoke, beautiful and specifically theirs,” Hitha Herzog, a retail analyst, told Fortune. “While some luxury brands offer basic customization, almost all luxury brands have no way to make one-off pieces for their VIP clients, or create something so aspirational customers can strive to eventually own.” One major exception: Hermés, which has skyrocketed in growth this year while its industry peers have struggled. Herzog said this is largely thanks to its Birkin bag, which amasses “long waitlists and requirements and benchmarks of how much money a customer spends before they can talk to the store about purchasing a bag.” That exclusivity, Herzog said, “creates a mystique around owning something rare, and gives it a sense of worth when you look at the price tag.” The China effectChina had been propelling luxury growth since 2000 all the way until the pandemic. “Luxury growth globally benefited from the growth of the Chinese middle class, the aspirational class, and the people that became millionaires,” Driscoll said.  LVMH, a bellwether for the larger luxury space, posted a 3% revenue drop last month, due in large part to the continued impacts of inflation on consumer behavior—especially in the crucial Chinese market. For its part, Kering reported a 15% year-over-year decline last month.Bain said the sharp decrease in spending in China is due to “lackluster consumer confidence”—and they’re not alone.Globally, the current economic environment has made many “aspirational” shoppers more conservative in their spending, Nicolas Llinas-Carrizosa, a BCG partner focused on luxury, told Fortune. “They’re prioritizing either financial investments or prioritizing spending in other categories they deem more important to them.” All told, the entire luxury sector is set to drop by 2% over the 2024 full-year period, Bain said. But that doesn’t mean consumers are pausing their spending altogether; the travel, fine wine and dining, and auto sectors both reported modest growth this year.Plus a “gradual recovery” in late 2025 is nonetheless still likely in China, Europe, the U.S. and especially Japan—where shoppers are the lucky beneficiary of favorable currency exchange rates. How many degrees of separation are you from the globe's most powerful business leaders? Explore who made our brand-new list of the 100 Most Powerful People in Business. Plus, learn about the metrics we used to make it.

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奢侈品 消费趋势 中国市场 品牌创新 经济环境
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