VietNamNet Bridge – In the next 10 years, urban areas would remain the potential destinations for foreign luxurious products, especially cars and beauty products.
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The latest survey by Kantar Worldpanel Vietnam, a subsidiary of the US WPP
Group, showed that the consumption habit of Vietnamese people has changed a lot.
In the next 10 years, foreign luxurious products would still have a lot of
development opportunities in big cities.
On November 2, 2012, campaignasia.com website showed the result of its survey,
saying that the increasingly high income of Vietnamese people, the young
population are the wonderful opportunities for foreign luxurious brands to
expand their business in the country.
The most valuable information the website has provided to luxury brand owners is
that in thoughts of Vietnamese, using luxurious products is the way to show
their high class and achievements. Vietnamese always want to show off their
richness and their high positions in the society with the things they wear or
carry.
According to Matthew Collier, Managing Director of Y&R Vietnam, has noted that
luxurious things, in mind of Vietnamese, means the things which have high
quality and high prices. In the country, a product or service would be
considered “luxurious” if they have the sale price of $480 at least.
The firm has found out from one of its survey that up to 64 percent of
Vietnamese think luxury means a new experience. The four high end brands in
Vietnam which have been most mentioned by Vietnamese are Apple, Sony, Toyota and
Honda.
Up to 52 percent of men buy luxurious consumer goods, including 36 percent in
Hanoi and 10 percent in HCM City,” the survey found.
Bloomberg newswire has reported that Rolls Royce, after learning about the
market demand, has decided to increase the number of sales agents from 105 to
120 in the next five years in order to access the millionaires in Chile,
Thailand and Vietnam.
The luxurious car manufacturer sold 3,538 cars in 2011, while 60 of them were
ordered by Vietnamese clients. These included four out of the total 33 dragon
version cars churned out by the manufacturers worldwide.
Meanwhile, Hermes has opened the second shop in Vietnam to boost the sales of
the products of the brand.
The poor suffer
While the rich spend more money on luxurious products, the poor have to cut down
their budget on daily basic needs.
Ralf Matthaes, Managing Director of Taylor Nelson TNS, said that in 2011, 55
percent of people put their five percent of income into savings. In 2012, 50
percent of polled people saved 5-10 percent of their incomes. Some of them said
they saved 20 percent of their monthly incomes. This would certainly affect the
domestic retail market.
Vietnamese spend most of their money on education, which account for 47 percent
of total spending. It is because Vietnamese believe that high education level
would help settle their financial problems.
Dr. Nguyen Huu Nguyen from the Southern Economics research center has noted that
though the economic crisis has made the incomes of the rich decrease or meet
difficulties in doing business, it has not affected the daily spending of the
rich.
Meanwhile, the economic downturn has immediately had negative impacts on the
lives of the poor. They have to cut down the budgets for daily food, and of
course, never spend money on luxurious things.
Dat Viet