Tag Archives: luxury

MEDIA: Luxury Slowdown Clips Phoenix’s Wings

Bottom line: Sputtering demand for luxury goods and cars is likely to hamstring Phoenix Satellite TV’s earnings for at least the next year, as the company increasingly loses ground to new media rivals.

Sliding luxury demand undermines Phoenix

The recent slowdown in China’s luxury goods market is claiming one of its first victims in the media realm, with Phoenix Satellite TV (HKEx: 2008) warning that a sudden chill in luxury ad sales has wiped out its profits in the first half of the year. The news certainly doesn’t bode well for traditional media companies, which are a favored place for luxury goods makers to advertise. Car makers are another major source of ad revenue for these older media companies, and rapidly slowing sales in that sector also means that names like Phoenix and even some new media high-flyers like Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) and Sina (Nasdaq: SINA) could be looking at a difficult period ahead. Read Full Post…

Wanda Steps Up Global Buying Binge

Wanda samples luxury yachts

Commercial real estate giant Wanda Group is continuing its recent global push, with announcements of a new major purchase of a British yacht maker and plans to build new high-end hotels in New York and London. While some of the plans look interesting, I do think that perhaps this company has just a bit too much money and even more ambition, and that it may be moving too quickly into unfamiliar areas both in terms of products and geography. It’s obviously way too early to predict success or failure for any of these new ventures, but I would caution the company to perhaps slow its rapid overseas expansion or risk running into some major problems in the future. Read Full Post…

China Car, Wine Probes: A New Trade War Phase

China uses domestic market as weapon in western trade wars

After years of relying on exports, China’s new focus on stronger domestic consumption to fuel economic growth is not only helping to diversify its economy but is also becoming a valuable new tool in its trade disputes with the West. Its major trading partners, most notably the US and Europe, may need to pay closer attention to China’s fast-growing domestic market when lodging new trade grievances in the future, or risk seeing their own exporters cut off from millions of increasingly wealthy Chinese consumers. Read Full Post…

Chery, Luxury Cars Hit New Speed Bumps

The rapid slowdown in China’s auto sales has spread to the higher-end of the market, boding poorly for foreign names like Volkswagen’s (Frankfurt: VOWG) Audi brand and BMW (Frankfurt: BMW), which have invested heavily in the market on a bet that pricier cars were less vulnerable to industry downturns than more mainstream models. After two turbo-charged years of growth that saw Chinese car sales jump on strong buying incentives from Beijing, growth in the market has suddenly disappeared as incentives ended and the central government takes other tightening steps to cool the overheated economy. Makers of high-end products, such as luxury bags, homes and cars, love to say how their products are more immune to economic downturns than mainstream goods, even though the reality is that the suffering is usually just slightly delayed for these higher-end products. But even luxury cars appear to already be suffering in the current car slowdown, with foreign media reporting that sellers of premium brands are now offering discounts of 16-20 percent to maintain sales. Those discounts look similar to ones being offered by more mainstream brands such as VW and SAIC (Shanghai: 600104), as companies lower prices to try and offset cooling demand. I previously said that Chinese car makers with major foreign partners are best positioned to survive the current downturn, which is bad news for names like Chery and BYD (HKEx: 1211; Shenzhen: 002594), which lack such partners that have the resources to weather such slowdowns. Chery has received a setback on that front, with Japanese media reporting the company’s plan to produce Subaru-branded vehicles in a new joint venture with Fuji Heavy Industries (Tokyo: 7270) has been rejected by China’s state planner because the company’s major shareholder, Toyota (Tokyo: 7203), already has 2 joint ventures in China, the maximum allowed under Chinese law. (English article) Chery says it will go ahead with the plan to make Subaru cars despite the rejection, but the development looks like a big setback as the industry gears up for some painful restructuring under a slowdown that will last a year or more.

Bottom line: Luxury brands will face a 1-2 year slowdown in China’s auto market similar to that seen by mainstream automakers as China takes steps to cool the market.

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