De Beers Opens Fourth China Location, Debuts Shanghai Exclusives

Jeweler Launches New Store At IFC In Lujiazui

Actress Shu Qi cuts the ribbon at the grand opening

With China, India and the Middle East poised to collectively take over the US in diamond purchases by 2015, major diamond miners and jewelers have continued to invest heavily in marketing and expansion, with China becoming a particular point of focus in recent years. Steadily growing middle-class demand, as well as regular bidding at auction on rarer and larger pieces, has enticed most of the world’s major diamond brands to enter the mainland China market or, at least, Hong Kong, creating a retail battleground in cities like Shanghai and Beijing. To set themselves apart from the pack and get in front of Chinese consumers, Van Cleef & Arpels recently launched a Shanghai exhibition of 370 rare pieces from its archives at the Shanghai Museum of Contemporary Art, while Harry Winston flew in “Gossip Girl” stars Leighton Meester and Ed Westwick to inaugurate its first flagship in Shanghai and Hong Kong-based Chow Sang Sang announced plans to open 50 new stores in the Mainland within the next “one to two years.”

Despite broader concerns about discretionary luxury purchases by middle-class Chinese this year, amid an environment of cooler economic growth, global diamond leader De Beers has no intention of falling further behind these and other competitors in China. Recently, De Beers opened its newest China location, its fourth, at Shanghai IFC in the city’s Pudong district. Located in the mall’s fine jewelry section, the 75 square meter glass-and-light-filled store is designed to dazzle, featuring the Talisman Crown — designed to celebrate Queen Elizabeth’s Diamond Jubilee — and the Talisman Wonder. To celebrate the opening, De Beers also created a set of eight special-edition Talisman Medals, each made up of rough diamonds arranged within a handcrafted serti-poinçon textured white, yellow or pink gold surrounding a central diamond setting.

As De Beers chief exec François Delage said at the opening, ”We are proud to continue to build the brand in China with the opening of our first store in Shanghai after the successful openings in Beijing, Tianjin and Dalian.”

De Beers opened its first mainland China location last year in Beijing (Image: PR)

According to De Beers Group CEO Philippe Mellier, De Beers hopes to open “at least five” new stores in China this year, so it’s got four more to go before hitting that goal. As Mellier put it at this year’s Reuters Mining & Metals Summit, ”We are looking at expanding our shops in continental China big time in 2012…We are growing the business where the biggest growth is – in Asia.”

Currently, the Group’s 50/50 LVMH Moet Hennessy joint venture diamond jewelry business has 49 stores around the world, and with sales of US$7 billion a year, De Beers now accounts for 10 percent of the total global diamond industry. In mainland China, however, the brand is still comparatively new, having opened its first location at Beijing’s Shin Kong Place last June. As part of its push to attract more Chinese consumers, De Beers has also indicated that it plans to upgrade its flagship stores in London and New York — regular stops for wealthy outbound Chinese tourist-shoppers. While this, and the brand’s overall China expansion effort, is important, an expected slowdown in the luxury industry growth rate in China this year and an increasingly crowded jewelry market there means De Beers will likely need to kick up its digital marketing efforts and figure out how to court “entry-level” middle-class buyers in Xi’an, Kunming and Harbin as well as ultra-wealthy Beijingers on New York shopping sprees.

Business & Finance / Investment / Jewelry / Lifestyle / Luxury / Marketing & Branding / Trending Topics
by Jing Daily
Tag: china only,de beers,diamonds,harry winston... , More
  • http://twitter.com/wardiamonds Wardiamonds

    It’s really no surprise that diamond companies like De Beers and Harry Winston are targeting markets in Cina an India. Western consumers have become increasingly concerned about the ethical provenance of all diamonds as the market is heavily contaminated with cut and polished blood diamonds that evade the human rights standards applied to rough blood diamonds by the Kimberley Process (KP) regulations. As a result of the failure of the KP to broaden the definition of a conflict diamond to include cut and polished blood diamonds, diamonds that fund regimes guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity account for a significant proportion of the market. Human rights activists in London and elsewhere in Europe have been highlighting the links to Israeli war crimes in Gaza which are funded by revenue from the Israeli diamond industry. Once informed, consumers in China and India are every bit as concerned about the ethical provenance of diamonds as consumers in the West. No woman wants to wear a blood diamond http://jfjfp.com/?p=32797

Headlines
At this year's Cannes Film Festival, Fan Bingbing gives international brands such as L'Oreal, Chopard, and Louis Vuitton publicity in both China and abroad.
As the growth of China's luxury market moves into single digits, those searching for a single cause must look beyond the government's anti-extravagance campaign.
As the fashion market becomes more competitive amidst a slowdown, brands must pay close attention to Chinese consumers' evolving requirements.
In case you missed them the first time around, here are some of Jing Daily’s top posts for the week of May 13-17.
Carolina Herrera plans to open its first China boutique in Shanghai this fall, which may be a smart move for the brand despite slowing retail growth.