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As COVID curbs cut travel and duty-free shopping, South Koreans are driving a luxury goods boom at home that has left Chanel barring nearly a third of would-be shoppers to stop bulk buyers snagging $10,000 bags for resale with markups of 20 per cent or more.
The storied French fashion and luxury company told Reuters it has seen traffic to its boutiques in South Korea skid since it began screening for customers it believed might be stocking up purely to flip to others in the resale market.
โWe were able to identify them (bulk buyers) after having analysed their buying patterns. Since this policy was implemented, the traffic in our boutiques has decreased by 30 per cent,โ Chanel told Reuters in a statement. It didnโt disclose exactly how it deemed those customers to be potential bulk buyers, and the privately owned business doesnโt disclose sales numbers by country.
Chanelโs strategy, implemented since July last year, came as global demand for luxury goods was picking up after the worst of the coronavirus pandemic. South Korea is the worldโs seventh-biggest luxury goods market according to Euromonitor, and the research firm estimates it was one of only two of the top seven markets by revenue โ the other being China โ to see sales grow last year from 2019 levels.
Supply at brands like Chanel, though, is tightly controlled, preserving exclusivity and boosting appeal with no online shopping option beyond cosmetics, perfumes and some small accessories. Such is the appetite in downtown Seoul that long queues form before dawn outside department stores as shoppers brace for whatโs known as an โopen runโ โ a sprint to Chanelโs doors at opening time.
โI arrived โฆ at 5.30 a.m. for an open run and I was notified that there were more than 30 people in front of me,โ a shopper told Reuters in front of a Chanel boutique in Seoul. Speaking on condition of anonymity because of privacy concerns, he said by the time he entered the store โ nearly 10 hours later โ the item he wanted was sold out.
Reflecting such red-hot demand in the resale market, a Chanel medium classic flap bag was sold at 13.5 million won ($11,031) โ 20 per cent more than its standard retail price โ in January on KREAM, a platform offering everything from sneakers to tech and luxury goods that is an affiliate of tech giant Naver Corp (035420.KS).
KREAM, an acronym for โKicks Rule Everything Around Meโ, was launched in 2020. It told Reuters its monthly transactions exceeded 100 billion won in December, and said South Koreaโs resale market is worth more than 1 trillion won โ nearly $820 million โ even at the most conservative estimates.
โQUEUE MANAGEMENTโ
While resale platforms like KREAM offer a range of brands, Chanel, like Swiss watchmaker Rolex, is a particularly sought-after brand because of its status among couples in South Korea as one of the most popular wedding gifts, and frequent price increases of its most iconic handbags.
Chanel increased prices of some handbags, accessories and seasonal ready-to-wear earlier this month in Asia and Europe, including by 5 per cent in South Korea โ where prices have just been raised for the fifth time in nine months, according to Chanel Korea.
In tandem with its screening for bulk buyers, Chanel said it has implemented a โqueue management systemโ: Clients are asked to give their contact number and reason for visiting the store so that they can be informed via text messages when they will be able to enter the boutique.
Brand experts and consumers are divided on the impact of the new buying pattern on Chanel.
โConsumers are voluntarily doing free ads for Chanel โ camping outside (boutiques), doing open runs, posting their experiences on social media,โ said Lee Eun Hee, a professor of consumer science at Inha University.
โI think all those phenomena have helped Chanel draw younger customers and make a big chunk of money off it.โ
โLINE STANDERSโ
Still, some consumers say long queues and waiting lists have put them off.
โI just gave up buying a Chanel product long ago,โ said a Seoul resident in her 30s, declining to be named due to privacy concerns.
โItโs too difficult to buy one, with some 300 people usually on a waiting list, and by the time itโs my turn, there is no product left. This really puts me off and I donโt want to be at the centre of this craziness.โ
Not giving up any time soon are the bulk buyer-resellers.
Speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, some resellers told Reuters theyโre hiring โline standersโ for a fee of up to $125 a day to stand in queues or enter stores on their behalf.
One reseller in his 30s told Reuters heโs been reselling his purchases at usually more than 20 per cent profit โ and it can be far more profitable when inventory level is low.
He said he sold a Chanel flap card holder recently on secondhand marketplace app Karrot for nearly 1 million won, 40 per cent above its retail price โ five minutes after it went up for sale.
REUTERS