Luxury brandnames are having a difficult time. LVMH’s leader Bernard Arnault hasactually seen his fortune tumble of late due to a 16% depression in the corporation’s share rate this year. Smart travel merchants are forthatreason looking beyond yet another expensive topquality shop and turning to the ‘pre-loved’ vintage market to drive conversion.
Germany’s Gebr. Heinemann has simply broadened its pre-loved high-end principle with the opening of a committed 215-square-foot shop at Copenhagen Airport selling accredited pre-owned products, consistingof high-end bags from Chanel, Dior, Fendi, Hermès, Louis Vuitton, and Saint Laurent.
The store—described as a “joint tactical relocation” alongwith the operator of the center—is Heinemann’s initially pre-loved standalone shop at an airport. However, the business has currently checked need on numerous cruise ships where the principle hasactually been effective: Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas and Utopia of the Seas both have pre-loved retail areas.
On Utopia, whose debut cruising from Port Canaveral in Florida was in July, Heinemann opened a store selling previouslyowned high-end items consistingof purses and sees from brandnames like Rolex, Louis Vuitton, Hermès, and Chanel.
The offering sits alongwith stores filled with brand-new sees from brandnames such as Tag Heuer, Hublot, and Breitling, as well as the newest in fragrance, cosmetics, alcohol, and tobacco. Heinemann Asia Pacific likewise started selling previouslyowned views in its Luxury Timepieces shop at Auckland Airport earlier this year.
In Copenhagen, the idea will be checked for one year. Sören Borch, Gebr. Heinemann’s director of sales experience and quality, commented: “In our objective declaration, we pledge customers a incredible selection with items that are amongst the most unique, trendiest, and rarest in our market. The brand-new pre-loved store in Copenhagen completely matches our selection and offers us the chance to tap into brand-new customer groups.”
Rising resale market controlled by Asia
Those customer groups are looking for more pre-owned items according to online previouslyowned merchant ThredUp’s 2024 Resale Report. By 2028, it declares the worldwide pre-owned clothing market will reach $350 billion, controlled by Asia (excluding Australasia). But amongst the leading 20 finest resale brandnames, none are in the high-end classification based on sell-through and volume of offered products in ThredUp’s market in 2023.
Travel retail has a larger share of high-spenders however even they haveactually been cutting back, making pre-owned high-end items a excellent alternative and likewise a more sustainable option. Commenting on used shops, a Heinemann representative informed me: “They enable travele