Shoppers are reflected in the window of a luxury watch shop in Shanghai on July 26, 2012. Chinese shoppers are increasingly buying luxury goods in mainland China, turning away from high-end stores abroad and in Hong Kong, a survey indicated. — AFP Photo

PARIS: Fuelled by surging demand in China, luxury goods makers are bucking the global economic slowdown and reaping huge profits on sales of high-end handbags, expensive jewellery and posh perfumes.

Results for the first-half of 2012 released this week showed major brands, including world leaders LVMH, PPR and Luxottica with rising profits driven by growing sales in emerging markets.

The results beat analyst expectations and allayed fears that the cooling down of China's economy would dampen luxury sales. Company bosses even expressed confidence that year-end figures would show continued growth.

Paris-based LVMH, whose assets include jeweller Bulgari, fashion house Louis Vuitton and a string of top champagne and spirits brands, said Thursday its net profit was up 28 per cent in the first half at 1.68 billion euros ($2.06 billion).

Shoppers try out high end massage chairs in a luxury shopping mall in Shanghai on July 26, 2012. Chinese shoppers are increasingly buying luxury goods in mainland China, turning away from high-end stores abroad and in Hong Kong, a survey indicated. — AFP Photo

Sales were up 26 per cent, with 29 per cent of revenues coming from Asia outside Japan, the group's largest market.

“We approach the second half of the year with confidence,” company CEO Bernard Arnault said, with LVMH noting the “global market (is) experiencing strong growth” despite “an uncertain economic environment in Europe.”Another leading French luxury and retail group, PPR, said the same day its first-half net profit was up 5.9 per cent to 477 million euros, following a 17 per cent jump in sales.

PPR's sales of luxury goods, which include fashion brands like Gucci, Yves Saint Laurent and jeweller Boucheron, were up by nearly a third, compensating for a 9.2 per cent drop in sportswear sales dragged down by its Puma brand.

“Business in greater China remained extremely buoyant, with sales climbing by an overall 21.5 per cent, fuelled by a 24.4 per cent surge in mainland China,”the company said of its luxury division.

Italy's Luxottica, the biggest eyewear maker in the world, said its first-half profits jumped 20.6 per cent to 195.5 million euros.

The company, which produces Oakley and Ray-Ban sunglasses as well as eyewear for Chanel and Prada, said sales rose by just one percent in Europe but were up 35 per cent in emerging markets.

A shopper walks through a luxury shopping mall in Shanghai on July 26, 2012. Chinese shoppers are increasingly buying luxury goods in mainland China, turning away from high-end stores abroad and in Hong Kong, a survey indicated. — AFP Photo

The results echoed similar figures released earlier this month by French luxury goods group Hermes, which reported first-half sales up 21.9 per cent to 1.59 billion euros, with Asian sales excluding Japan up 25 per cent.

Analysts say China now accounts for about 40 per cent of the global luxury goods market and that Chinese appetites are driving sales not only in the country but abroad, as Chinese tourists often rack up sales while on foreign trips.

Despite high taxes on luxury goods in mainland China, companies are also increasingly expanding into its retail market, with PPR alone opening 22 stores in China in the first half of the year.

Still, analysts are warning that some sort of slowdown in luxury goods sales is to be expected if China's red-hot economic growth continues to cool.

China's economy grew by a still-strong 7.6 per cent in the second quarter, but the expansion was at its slowest pace in more than three years as global economic problems started to hit the world's second-largest economy.

Thomas Mesmin, an analyst at CA Chevreux, said it was inevitable that a global economic downturn would have an impact on luxury goods.

“Saying that luxury goods are resistant to the crisis sounds good, but it's wrong. There is a fairly strong correlation between the development of the global economy and the luxury market,” he said.

“We are accustomed to caviar, but we're probably going to have to eat a little more salmon,” he said.

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