Luxe Life

Louis Vuitton Cancels Tokyo Flagship Store

By Kimberly Castro

Posted: December 17, 2008

The world's largest luxury goods conglomerate has been stung by the global economic slowdown. LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA has abandoned its plans for a Louis Vuitton flagship store in Tokyo's Ginza shopping district, proving that even the strongest international luxury brands can't weather the downturn. The store was due for completion in 2010, said an official for the developer, Hulic Co.

Growing up in the '80s, I remember Japan being the most concentrated source of revenue for luxury brands. Louis Vuitton. Gucci. Hermes. It's a country that's always been renowned for its thirst for luxury goods. Japan has been a major market area for LVMH, which has 56 stores in the country. So I'm surprised by the company's latest announcement.

But at the same time, I'm not.

Japanese consumers are increasingly forgoing luxury brands for smaller-ticket items and trading down for designerlike goods at chain stores such as H&M and Zara. According to a luxury study by Bain & Co., Japan's luxury market, which is 12 percent of the global total, is already in a luxury goods recession and is expected to decline by 7 percent this year, vs. a 2 percent decline in 2007.

No Fair Judgement

That was not their right to cancel a store just because of their personal reason thats not fair to public people because that might be their favorite store and its not their no more and they can't shop their no more just because they canceled the store

Brittany of PA @ Apr 24, 2009 09:15:57 AM

Sounds to me like Japan is signaling what we can expect here. Who needs the luxury brands anyway?

Walmart is the new (old) cool.

of @ Dec 17, 2008 12:45:46 PM

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Luxe Life

Luxury is no longer the sole province of the elite. Upscale goods and services now target a much broader market. Kimberly Castro, deputy business editor of U.S.News & World Report, takes a look at the luxe life, from fine wines and cars to high-end real estate and wealth management. Though no elitist, Kim does admit a fondness for a bold bottle of Scout's Honor from Venge Vineyards and satiating her wanderlust in Europe.

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