Luxury Institute News

October 11, 2012

Ultra-Wealthy Shoppers Spend More On Luxury Where They Maintain Personal Relationships; Pentamillionaires most likely to be close with specific sales professionals at Barneys, Bergdorf Goodman

(NEW YORK) October 11, 2012 – U.S. consumers with at least $5 million in assets and $200,000 in annual income share detailed opinions and observations about their relationships with salespeople in six luxury categories in the new 2012 Luxury Customer Relationship Index survey from the independent and objective New York-based Luxury Institute.

High-ticket categories show higher rates of customers who deal with a specific salesperson.  Watches (49%) lead all categories in terms of proportion of customers who maintain relationships with salespeople, followed by jewelry (40%) and men’s ready-to-wear (38%). There is a noticeable drop-off in rates of personal relationships at luxury retailers (30%), handbag brands (27%) and women’s ready-to-wear (21%).

Across categories, 70% of ultra-wealthy customers who transact and communicate with a specific salesperson say that this relationship causes them to spend more on goods and services in stores and on the Web. The biggest positive impact on sales comes when customers maintain relationships with salespeople in luxury retail, and in both men’s and women’s ready-to-wear categories.

In luxury retail, Bergdorf Goodman (51%) and Barneys (49%) enjoy the highest rates of maintaining relationships with ultra-wealthy customers, with larger chains like Bloomingdale’s and Nordstrom seeing lower incidence of relationships. In the middle are Brooks Brothers (36%), Neiman Marcus (32%), Lord & Taylor (30%), and Saks (26%).

“Luxury retailers know that relationships drive sales,” says Luxury Institute CEO Milton Pedraza. “The right hiring, education programs and Customer Culture help to promote more productive relationships and higher sales.”

About the Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com)
The Luxury Institute is the objective and independent global voice of the high net-worth consumer. The Institute conducts extensive and actionable research with wealthy consumers about their behaviors and attitudes on customer experience best practices. In addition, we work closely with top-tier luxury brands to successfully transform their organizational cultures into more profitable customer-centric enterprises. Our Luxury CRM Culture consulting process leverages our fact-based research and enables luxury brands to dramatically Outbehave as well as Outperform their competition. The Luxury Institute also operates LuxuryBoard.com, a membership-based online research portal, and the Luxury CRM Association, a membership organization dedicated to building customer-centric luxury enterprises.

April 24, 2012

Wealthy U.S. Consumers Favor and Feel More Connected to Luxury Brands Offering a Mobile App

(NEW YORK) April 24, 2012 – The independent and objective New York City-based Luxury Institute, in cooperation with award-winning mobile marketing agency Plastic Mobile, surveyed affluent U.S. consumers about the growing connection between luxury and the emerging mobile market. The results of their research have just been released in the study, “Mobile Apps And Commerce for Luxury Brands.”

“Luxury brands must acknowledge the impact of technology advancements in the mobile space and find a humanistic way to connect and engage with their consumers through mobile,” says Milton Pedraza, CEO of Luxury Institute.

Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Saks Fifth Avenue, and Gilt Groupe are the most frequently downloaded apps by wealthy consumers who have luxury brand applications on their mobile device. Most affluent smartphone owners who are downloading luxury apps are using them to find information on products, services or brands (56%).

Almost all wealthy consumers who have used luxury brand apps report that they have had a good experience with the mobile apps (93%). In addition, 71% report that they feel better connected to luxury brands after downloading and/or using their applications and 64% view luxury brands that offer a mobile application more favorably than brands that do not.

The survey respondents indicate there are a number of features they expect from luxury brand applications and highlight loyalty programs (46%) and early access to sales (45%) as the most important.  In addition, providing sales professionals with a mobile application that can specify details about products (53%), have the ability to check for sizes and availability at other stores (50%) and in-store product inventory (47%) would enrich the luxury shopping experience for affluent consumers.

Of the 63% of wealthy consumers who have made a purchase through their mobile device, just under 20% have bought a luxury product or service. While preference for the in-store experience (45%) is why wealthy smartphone users have not yet fully embraced luxury mobile commerce, the majority of luxury consumers who choose to shop via mobile report that there is no upper monetary limit to how much they would spend (72%). This indicates a tremendous emerging opportunity for luxury brands to connect with consumers through mobile.

“Mobile has been receiving a lot attention in the retail space lately. The study suggests the mobile strategy for luxury brands must be about enhancing the in-store customer experience and using the platform to help strengthen customer relationships,” says Melody Adhami, President and COO of Plastic Mobile.

About Luxury Institute (www.LuxuryInstitute.com)
The Luxury Institute is the objective and independent global voice of the high net-worth consumer. The Institute conducts extensive and actionable research with wealthy consumers about their behaviors and attitudes on customer experience best practices. In addition, we work closely with top-tier luxury brands to successfully transform their organizational cultures into more profitable customer-centric enterprises. Our Luxury CRM Culture consulting process leverages our fact-based research and enables luxury brands to dramatically Outbehave as well as Outperform their competition. The Luxury Institute also operates LuxuryBoard.com, a membership-based online research portal, and the Luxury CRM Association, a membership organization dedicated to building customer-centric luxury enterprises.

About Plastic Mobile
Plastic Mobile is an award-winning mobile marketing agency of thinkers, artists, creators and builders with one common aspiration: to create extraordinary user experiences. Plastic Mobile is at the heart of the evolution of interactive mobile technology, pushing the boundaries and setting the bar for the standard of quality.

Known for many quality, first-in-kind mobile initiatives, Plastic Mobile delivers exceptional client service and highly customized mobile solutions for all platforms. With a diverse, high-profile client list, including Air Miles, Axe and Royal Le Page, they are the proud recipients of myriad awards, including the 15th annual Webby shopping award, “the Oscars of the Internet.” www.plasticmobile.com

October 10, 2011

Stocks Tumble; Wealthy Keep Shopping

By Cotten Timberlake
Bloomberg
October 7, 2011

When stock markets tumble, wealthy U.S. shoppers typically cut back their visits to such luxury emporiums as Saks Inc. (SKS) and Nordstrom Inc. (JWN) Yet even as the markets have seesawed, they’ve kept right on spending.

Exhibit A: Saks and Nordstrom yesterday reported September sales that exceeded analysts’ estimates, while luxury retailers as a whole outpaced all other segments except gasoline-selling wholesale clubs.

Affluent Americans aged 24 to 49 who have a yen for high living and bling are helping drive luxury sales, says Unity Marketing, which conducts quarterly shopper surveys. One cohort, called the “X-Fluents” — for “extremely affluent” — are responsible for 23 percent of luxury sales in the U.S., up from 18 percent in 2007, the Stevens, Pennsylvania-based firm said in a Sept. 14 client presentation it provided to Bloomberg News.

“The U.S. marketplace is more concentrated among young people,” said Unity President Pam Danziger. “They are more predisposed to luxury indulgence and represent more promising targets to luxury brands.”

X-Fluents were out in force again last month, she said.

Another group that Unity has dubbed “Aspirers” are also spending more on luxury, according to Danziger. They favor “flash, bling and status” and now account for 18 percent of luxury sales compared with 16 percent in 2007, she said.

Wealth Effect

In the past, affluent shoppers’ willingness to buy baubles has been tied to the stock market because its performance affects the perception of their own wealth — the so-called wealth effect. Luxury was the hardest hit retail segment during the financial meltdown three years ago; sales in the U.S. plummeted 9.1 percent in 2009, according to theInternational Council of Shopping Centers.

This time is different. Though the Dow Jones Industrial Average swung by 4 percentage points daily for an unprecedented stretch in August and consumer confidence stagnated near a two- year low in September, luxury sales may outpace the overall industry this holiday season.

Sales at luxury stores open at least a year will climb 7.5 percent, faster than the 6.7 percent increase in November and December of 2010, predicts the ICSC. Other retail segments will see slower or unchanged sales growth, the New York-based trade group said.

Unity, which sells the results of its surveys to such retailers as Neiman Marcus Group Inc. and Tiffany & Co. (TIF), has been asking luxury shoppers questions since 2002.

Survey Questions

Respondents are asked to agree or disagree with such statements as: “Luxury is defined by the brand of the product, so if it isn’t a luxury brand it isn’t a luxury.” Or: “Once you experience luxury in your life, you never want to go back to the ordinary.”

The firm devised five personality groups based on income and spending patterns.

X-Fluents are the most highly indulgent, spending more, buying the most frequently and dedicated to maintaining a deluxe lifestyle. Aspirers like to buy and display brands.

“Butterflies” are on average are over 47, mostly female and enjoy luxury experiences such as travel. “Cocooners,” also over 47 on average, express their luxury identity by spending on their nests. “Temperate Pragmatists” — average age 45 — have a take-it-or-leave it attitude towardluxury goods and the lowest income of the five.

X-Fluent Incomes

X-Fluents laid out an average $253,960 on fashion accessories, cars, home furnishings, travel and dining last year, up almost a third from 2009. X-Fluents’ income averages $410,152 before taxes, and they are the youngest, or 42 on average, with a majority 40 or younger.

Some of the purchases they reported were paid for with financing and others by tapping net worth. The averages were pulled upward by the super-wealthy respondents.

The younger luxury consumers are, the more concerned they are with “bragging rights,” the Affluence Collaborative, a New York market research firm, wrote in a July research report.

Aspirers have an average age of 43.5 and income of $303,057, with a minimum of $100,000 to qualify, Unity says. They have not achieved the level of luxury to which they aspire and are the most materialistic, according to the firm.

After pulling back for the past two years, aspirational consumers have returned to the stores to sate their pent-up demand, says Milton Pedraza, chief executive officer of the Luxury Institute, a New York-based research firm.

Stock Options

Their wherewithal stems from job security, bonuses and stock options, Pedraza said. Many are clustered in financial services and Silicon Valley, removed from the economic challenges other Americans face.

“Right now people continue to want luxury,” Neiman Marcus Chairman Burton Tansky said in an interview.

The Dallas-based retailer has been actively courting younger, affluent customers, Wanda Gierhart, senior vice president, said in a Sept. 30 phone interview.

It is updating its contemporary fashion department — which sells such brands as Diane von Furstenberg and Alice + Olivia — to give it “a different edge” than the rest of the store, Gierhart said. Six months ago, Neiman Marcus for the first time started allowing sales associates in that department to wear denim to work.

The retailer shifted “a lot” of its advertising spending to digital ads this past year, so customers know they can shop at Neiman Marcus whenever and wherever they want to, Gierhart said. It has ramped up its social media efforts and modernized the aesthetics of its publications, she said.

‘Emerging Customer’

The “emerging customer” likes to mix fashions according to her own taste, Gierhart said, which differs from a more traditional head-to-toe look in European brands, she said.

A greater concentration of X-Fluents does not necessarily bode well for the industry long term, Danziger said.

Since the recession, many former luxury buyers have dropped out and once again view themselves as middle-class, Danziger said. While many of these had spent significantly less on luxury goods individually, they together had accounted for a lot of purchasing, she said.

“Where is the growth going to come from?” she asked.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-07/-x-fluents-at-saks-defy-turbulence-to-buoy-luxury-sales-retail.html

October 5, 2011

Time to check out Saks, Tiffany?

The economy is slowing, and most consumers are cutting back — but it looks like the well-heeled have barely noticed. That means the stocks of luxury retailers may be in for lift.

By Michael Brush
MSN Money
October 4, 2011

…And I hear a similar tale from the Luxury Institute, based in New York, which conducts regular surveys of wealthy consumers, those with annual incomes of $150,000 or more and median net worth of $1.2 million. Surveys done since the market meltdown started this summer found that despite such weakness, significantly fewer wealthy consumers say they will cut back on luxury-goods spending, compared with the previous two years. “They are feeling a little bit of the pain, but it is not dramatic,” says Milton Pedraza, Luxury Institute’s CEO…

Click the link to read the entire article: http://money.msn.com/investment-advice/time-to-check-out-saks-tiffany-brush.aspx

March 10, 2011

Consumers: We want Gucci or Target. Forget the Gap

By Jessica Dickler
CNNMoney
March 9, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Consumers are ready for a little luxury. Despite cutting back in other areas, such as dining, they are showing a clear preference for select high-end apparel brands, such as Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Burberry.

After taking a hit at the height of the recession, sales of luxury goods have rebounded strongly, up 10%-12% last year in the U.S., according to estimates by Telsey Advisory Group, a retail equity research firm. Comparatively, retail sales across the board rose just 6%.

“People are willing to pay a premium on something that delivers on luxury,” noted Milton Pedraza, the CEO of the Luxury Institute, which tracks spending among wealthy consumers with a minimum annual income of $150,000. “They will buy fewer but more expensive things. There’s a lot more value consciousness.”

But with an eye on value, shoppers are also hunting down designer brands at steep discounts, frequenting stores such TJ Maxx and online sale sites such as Gilt Groupe.

Ed Jay, senior vice president of American Express Business Insights, calls this “the barbell effect.”

Who’s buying homes? The rich

“They are more high and low in the way that they are spending,” Jay said of today’s consumers. “High-end brands are holding ground among consumers, while spending at value oriented stores has also been pretty stable. It’s a tough place for mid-tier right now,” he said, referring to retailers like the Gap, Chico’s and Ann Taylor.

Susan Towers, who owns her own design business in New York, admits she shops high and low, but nothing in between.

“I shop at Barney’s and Bergdorf’s and take a walk through Loehmann’s every so often,” she said. Lately she says it’s more Loehmann’s and less Barney’s, but still “I’ve never really believed in buying mid-priced stuff.”

She has had to make sacrifices to afford Barney’s, though, because she makes about half of what she used to bring in before the recession. “I had to cut back, eat out less, take less vacations, things like that,” Towers explained.

Part-time French teacher Geraldine Trippitelli also says she would rather have one luxury item, which she pairs with other much less expensive clothing, than more mid-range brands.

“I prefer one Chanel jacket with cheap jeans and T-shirt, but just one, and then I have to be careful for a long time,” said Trippitelli, who shops either in high-end boutiques in New York or discounters like TJ Maxx and Target.

And other shoppers seem to be following suit. Overall luxury fashion spending is up 35% in the past year, while mainstream fashion spending gained just 8% since last year, according to the most recent data by American Express Business Insights, which tracks the spending habits of its 90 million cardholders.

And while high-end department stores like Nordstrom and Saks have rebounded strongly from the recession, more middle-of-the-road shops, such as Macy’s and JC Penney, have struggled to gain ground.

Same-store sales, an important barometer in retail, rose 5.8% at Macy’s and 5% at Kohl’s in February, while Nordstrom jumped 7.3% and Saks was a whopping 15.3% higher. The Gap and Banana Republic both had same-store sales below where they were a year ago.

Part of this trend, explained Robert W. Baird & Co. retail analyst Erika Maschmeyer, is the shift in focus to quality rather than quantity during the recession. “People got used to a different standard of living in the boom area and once you’ve traded up, it’s hard to shift back down,” she said.

Still, as the economy improves and consumer confidence continues to increase, Maschmeyer predicts even those mid-level stores will eventually see stronger sales. “I wouldn’t bet against the American consumer; we like to spend money,” she said.

http://money.cnn.com/2011/03/09/pf/consumers_prefer_luxury/

November 26, 2010

Big Spenders Returning To The Luxury Fold

By Marina Strauss
Globe and Mail
November 25, 2010

In the depth of the recession, Tiffany & Co. (TIF-N60.14-0.46-0.76%) struggled to sell $3,200 (U.S.) diamond earrings and $12,000 bangles, while it fared better with $100 silver necklaces.

Today, the situation is reversed, as the high-end retailer grapples with softer sales of jewellery under $500 even as it enjoys a recovery in higher-priced items.

“The people who are coming in to spend $1,000 or $5,000 or $10,000 or $20,000, they’re showing a much greater willingness to spend,” Tiffany vice-president Mark Aaron said in an interview on Wednesday.

“That customer is feeling a little better about things, while people who might purchase silver jewellery are spending more cautiously.”

New York-based Tiffany and other purveyors of luxury goods are rebounding from the recession in their North American businesses, which are still underperforming their overseas operations.

Retailers such as Saks Inc. and Coach Inc. are beating analysts’ quarterly expectations, luring well-heeled customers with pumped-up ad spending and classic styles, while scaling back margin-pinching discounting.

“We have turned the corner,” said Milton Pedraza, chief executive officer of market researcher the Luxury Institute in New York.

Still, upscale companies will be challenged to sustain the gains because of the relatively easy comparisons with previous recessionary years, he said.

And wealthy consumers are no longer shelling out for $800 camera bags or other frivolous merchandise, he said. “There’s a flight to quality.”

At Toronto-based men’s clothier Harry Rosen, sales of $5,000 (Canadian) Tom Ford suits and $4,500 Zegna leather jackets are particularly strong, said CEO Larry Rosen. The privately-held retailer’s overall sales so far this year have jumped by more than 13 per cent, compared with a decline of 5 per cent in 2009, he said. For this month alone, they’ve shot up 25 per cent from a year earlier. “The luxury customer has come back.”

But the past couple of years have taught Mr. Rosen to be more disciplined in focusing on classics – such as $300 cashmere sweaters – and refraining from taking risks on bright orange sweaters or “off-the-wall” items, he said. This year he is running sales with discounts of up to 20 per cent, compared with 40-per-cent reductions last year.

Saks has also reduced its promotions by offering, for example, “family and friend” discounts of 20 per cent this year compared with 25 per cent last year, CEO Steve Sadove said last week. The retailer’s cosmetics markdowns dropped to 10 per cent from 15 per cent. “We are consistently trying to reduce the number of [markdown] events, the brands included, the value of the events, and move toward a more full-priced selling environment,” Mr. Sadove said.

Tiffany, which doesn’t discount merchandise, raised its ad spending this year – shifting toward previous peak levels – after reducing it to 5.9 per cent of sales in 2009, down from 7.2 per cent of sales in 2008, Mr. Aaron said.

The marketing helped the jeweller perk up its third-quarter sales by 14 per cent, to $681.7-million (U.S.), while profit jumped 27 per cent to $55.1-million; Tiffany forecast a strong holiday season and raised its annual outlook.

Tiffany’s revenue in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Brazil, which makes up about half of its business, rose 9 per cent, although the gains trailed those in the Asia-Pacific region (up 24 per cent;) Europe (22 per cent;) and Japan (12 per cent.)

Same-store sales, an important retail measure, rose 5 per cent in the Americas, below the overall 12-per-cent gain and largely driven by higher prices, which are expected to increase further early next year to offset rising costs of diamonds and precious metals such as gold.

To try to win more business, Tiffany is expanding into handbags, briefcases and watches. It and other upscale retailers are capitalizing on affluent consumers who feel more confident in their spending, helping the chains outperform other merchants whose customers are worried about the uncertain economy and sticking to must-have purchases.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/big-spenders-returning-to-the-luxury-fold/article1812574/

October 28, 2010

Slim chance of Mr Tod’s taking over Saks

By Antonella Ciancio and Phil Wahba
Reuters
October 27, 2010

(Reuters) – When Italian businessman Diego Della Valle overtook Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim as top shareholder in U.S. retailer Saks (SKS.N) last week, markets jumped on speculation of a possible takeover bid.

But the man who turned Tod’s (TOD.MI) from a family shoe factory into the world’s fourth biggest shoemaker by market value, is more likely to do what he knows well — rake in lucrative returns from selling to the highest bidder.

Della Valle, one of Italy’s most powerful industrialists, is also a keen investor, with interests from French luxury giant LVMH (LVMH.PA) to Vespa scooter maker Piaggio (PIA.MI) and eyewear maker Marcolin (MCL.MI).

He also has interests in banks and soccer.

“A bid by Della Valle for 100 percent of Saks is highly unlikely,” an Italian banker close to Della Valle told Reuters on conditions of anonymity. “If he can make a double-digit profit by selling his stake, he will sell,” he said.

In less than two years, Della Valle has splurged more than $170 million to acquire a 19.05 percent stake in Saks, his second biggest holding after Tod’s.

The size of the investment has prompted questions over whether Della Valle aims at enhancing Tod’s or his stock portfolio.

“Della Valle has strategic holdings only in niche companies, such as Marcolin,” a Milan-based luxury analyst said, asking not to be named. “When someone makes such a big investment, it is for making capital gains,” he said.

Asked about his plans, Della Valle said last week Saks was a “great opportunity,” declining to give detail.

“I bet Della Valle will try to sell his stake in 12 months, if Slim lets him do it,” the analyst said. “Slim is in the best position to make an offer and might want to regain his status.”

Saks has become a target of takeover talk since last year when it removed a so-called poison pill aimed at averting a potential hostile bid by Slim.

“I think they view (Della Valle) as friendly because he is a vendor,” said Paul Swinand, Chicago-based Morningstar’s analyst.

Slim last reported a higher stake in February, when he had 25.6 million shares. He owns 15.9 percent of Saks, according to Reuters data.

LITTLE MECCA

Tod’s, which includes the Fay, Hogan, and Roger Vivier brands, was seen as too small in the United States to justify a major investment there. The U.S. market accounted for around 7 percent of first-half revenue of 377.5 million euros for Tod’s.

“I do not expect Tod’s to grow fivefold in the short term in the U.S.,” Centrobanca analyst Simone Ragazzi told Reuters.

Whatever Della Valle plans are, they will have to suit Saks.

The Italian has raised the possibility of expanding Saks internationally, but Saks’s chief executive Steve Sadove has repeatedly said the retailer would focus on domestic growth.

“(Saks) is a little mecca which everyone visits,” Milton Pedraza, chief executive of consulting firm Luxury Institute, told Reuters. “Della Valle looks at Saks and sees a global brand,” he said.

The company, which operates 48 full line stores and 56 Off 5th outlets, has closed seven stores this year, saying it wanted to focus on its best-performing locations.

Saks shares have been on a tear in recent weeks, at first buoyed by speculation it could be a takeover target by a group of British private equity firms, and then by the spectre of a fight between Della Valle and Slim.

But last month, JP Morgan analyst Charles Grom lowered his price target on the stock to $8, saying luxury spending remained uncertain.

Saks, expected to eke out a small profit for its 2011 fiscal year after two years of losses, has a price-earnings ratio of 54.8 based on 2012 profit forecasts and a stock price of $10.96.

Rival U.S. department store chains Nordstrom (JWN.N) and Macy’s have price-earnings valuations of 12.6 and 10.3 respectively.

(Reporting by Antonella Ciancio and Phil Wahba; Writing by Antonella Ciancio; Editing by Dan Lalor)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69Q2LE20101027

August 17, 2010

Saks results beat on full-price selling

Posted in Luxury Market,Retail
Tags: , ,

By Phil Wahba

NEW YORK | Tue Aug 17, 2010 2:51pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Saks Inc posted better-than-expected quarterly results on Tuesday, helped by an uptick in luxury spending and selling fewer items at a discount, sending its shares up more than 3 percent.

Saks said sales at stores open at least one year, or same-store sales, rose 4.6 percent, with its flagship department store on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue performing well.

Across the Saks Fifth Avenue chain, shoppers sought shoes, handbags, women’s designer apparel and men’s tailored clothing, among other categories.

However, Chief Executive Stephen Sadove cautioned that the U.S. economy is fragile and that the company would continue to be conservative in how it manages inventory.

“We believe that economic recovery will be slow and fragile with potential periods of increased volatility,” Sadove said on a call with analysts.

Saks reported a second-quarter net loss of $32.2 million, or 21 cents per share, compared with a loss of $54.5 million, or 39 cents a share, a year earlier.

Excluding one-time items, Saks reported a loss of 13 cents per share. On average, analysts expected a loss of 17 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Sales rose 5.1 percent to $593.1 million, ahead of the $585.2 million that analysts expected.

Gross margins rose 7 percentage points from a year earlier to 37.3 percent as tighter inventories reduced the need for price markdowns.

FEWER STORES, HIGHER MARGINS

Saks sees same-store sales rising in the “mid-single digit” percentage range for the remainder of its fiscal year, outpacing a “low-to-mid single digit” increase in same-store inventory levels.

It forecast improved gross margin rates, saying they would hit 39 percent in the second half of its fiscal year.

Saks has been vigilant in managing its inventory to avoid a repeat of the deep discounts it offered in late 2008 to clear merchandise during the financial crisis.

“It’s wise to drain inventories right now a little bit because the third quarter is going to be very soft,” said Milton Pedraza, chief executive of the Luxury Institute, a consulting firm. “That promotes price and margin stability.”

Similarly, off-price retailer TJX Cos Inc , which operates T.J. Maxx and Marshalls, said inventory was down 13 percent during the quarter. CEO Carol Meyrowitz said the company will further reduce markdowns.

A number of major department store chains such as Macy’s Inc, Nordstrom Inc  and Kohl’s Corp have enjoyed strong same-store sales increases in recent months, putting pressure on off-price channels and outlet stores.

Saks, which operates 50 Saks Fifth Avenue stores and 55 OFF 5th outlets, said same-store sales growth at its outlets during the quarter was lower than the companywide average, though those outlets were up against tougher numbers to beat.

Saks has also been shutting underperforming stores. On Tuesday, the company said it was closing Saks Fifth Avenue stores in Plano, Texas and Mission Viejo, California, bringing to five the number of closings so far this year.

Sadove said that it might close a few more Fifth Avenue stores. The company plans to open a handful of its lower-priced OFF 5th outlets annually in the next few years.

Saks shares were up 26 cents, or 3.4 percent to $7.87 in afternoon trading, while TJX shares were up 86 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $42.23.

http://www.reuters.com/article/globalMarketsNews/idUSTRE67G26Q20100817

July 20, 2010

Luxury Retailers: Cautiously Shoptimistic

Posted in Luxury Market
Tags: ,

Karen Katz, EVP of luxury retailer Neiman Marcus Group, would just as soon forget 2009.

“Luxury retail in general took the hardest hit during this recession,” Katz recently commented. “Our customers pulled back dramatically from spending… that being said, we are very happy to see that business is coming back. The customer is definitely back in the stores.”

Katz, who will take over as CEO of Neiman Marcus in October, hopes she has a recovery ahead of her. The company’s sales did indeed see an uptick in revenue for the first half of the year, but Neiman Marcus was forced to do something out of character: use discounting to prompt sales.

That’s always a risk for an upscale retailer, but Katz “remains confident the brand was protected as Neiman’s kept its focus on exclusive merchandise.”

Milton Pedraza, CEO of The Luxury Institute, believes Neiman’s discounting had “some short-term impact on the brand’s reputation for exclusivity,” but, he adds, “I think the brand clearly survived.”

With customers drifting away from luxury brands and stores in 2008 and 2009, Neiman Marcus and other luxury retailers were forced into territory that is typically occupied by its down-market competitors.

Saks, another luxury retailer, tried everything from store discounting to online sales and, in the first half of the year, implemented a new ad campaign designed to get customers to “think about” the value of their brand.

Saks Fifth Avenue has struggled but it, too, has seen modest increases so far in 2010. Saks CEO Steve Sadove, like Katz, is hopeful the worst is over, but he isn’t being bullish on the recovery just yet.

“We’ll continue to be cautious, Sadove told CNBC. “I think you’ll see a little bit more ‘opportunity buying’ in certain categories, like the shoes, like the handbags. I would say inventories will be growing a little bit less than consumption, but we’ll still continue to be cautious.”

For her part, Neiman’s Katz is looking at a future that includes more than just in-store selling.

“I believe that the intersection of traditional retailing, e-commerce retailing and social networking… all of that is going to come together in a very different way than we can see it today,” says Katz. “We are just starting to understand how powerful that intersection can be, so we’ll see where it evolves to.”

http://www.brandchannel.com/home/post/2010/07/16/Luxury-Retailers-Eager-for-Change.aspx

Luxury retailers feeling hopeful as wealthy shoppers start spending again

High-end retailers open discount stores and outlets to capture more of the market

By Arlene Satchell, Sun Sentinel, July 19, 2010

On this trip, Guzzi bought a $100 Lily dress for $46, while Picarello snagged a $300 pair of Gucci glasses for $149.

Luxury sales matter because increased spending at these retail stores are a boost to the local economy and job creation. South Florida’s concentration of wealth means it supports more luxury retail than many other parts of the country.

A recent Gallup poll found self-reported spending by upper-income Americans rose roughly 16 percent to an average of $126 a day for the week ending June 20, up from $109 a day when surveyed the same week a year earlier.

By contrast, middle- and lower-income Americans spent an average of $59 a day that week, which was unchanged from last year, the survey noted.

At Nordstrom, year-over-year sales were up 14 percent in the five weeks ending July 3, in stores that had been open a year or more.

“Overall, we’re encouraged,” said Nordstrom spokesman Colin Johnson. “But we’re mindful of the fact that customers remain cautious and are mindful of how and where they shop.”

While some luxury retailers have fared better this year, experts say growth is tepid given last year’s dismal sales.

In the first quarter of 2009, luxury retailers Saks, Nordstrom and others had double-digit monthly sales declines – as high as 31 percent for some.

“The real test will be if luxury [spending] can show growth as we enter into the early fall period,” said Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst with the NDP Group, a market research firm in New York.

A significant rebound in the segment is unlikely until the national unemployment rate falls to 6 percent or 7 percent, said Milton Pedraza, chief executive of the Luxury Institute in New York. Unemployment was 9.5 percent in June. That’s when so-called “aspirationals” – middle-class shoppers with an affinity for luxury goods – are likely to return.

To combat the recession’s lingering effects and attract affluent buyers who have turned frugal, some retailers have had to reduce prices.

“There’s a lot more affordability in the luxury sector today,” Pedraza said. A pair of shoes or handbag that cost $1,200 two years ago is now selling for $800 or $900, he said.

Luxury retailers have reduced the number of apparel brands they carry to the most popular, newest and most innovative, said Cynthia Cohen, president of Miami-based Strategic Mindshare, a national retail consulting firm.

“Anything that’s not selling, they’re getting rid of,” she said.

Another result of luxury retailers’ adapting to the marketplace is more off-price and clearance outlet stores.

Nordstrom, for example is opening more Nordstrom Rack stores, which sells its goods at a 50 percent to 60 percent discount.

Bloomingdale’s also plans four outlet stores this year, signaling its foray into the luxury discount market. Two of the outlet stores will be in South Florida.

Experts say it’s an effort to capture business from stores like Macy’s and Dillard’s.

“It’s an attempt to go down market, without saying so,” Pedraza said.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/business/fl-luxury-retail-rebound-20100719,0,1245303.story

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