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China’s nouveau riche thirsty for premium vino


 

Visitors examine wine at Vinexpo Asia-Pacific held at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre May 25, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Bobby Yip (CHINA – Tags: BUSINESS SOCIETY)

By Farah Master

SHANGHAI |Reuters Tue Jan 4, 2011 10:15am EST

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Following the explosion in demand for designer bags, Italian suits and fast cars, expensive French and Italian wines are set to be the next must-have accessory for the wealthy Chinese consumer.

Wine bars are proliferating rapidly inShanghai, the country’s glitzy financial capital, where young Chinese professionals congregate after work and regularly splurge around 1,000 yuan on a bottle of wine.

“Chinese people are very aspirational and materialistic so once they have bought the best local brand then they start looking for something even better and more expensive,” said Ch’ng Poh Tiong, wine columnist and publisher of The Wine Review publication, based in Southeast Asia, Hong Kong and China.

WhileChinahas a growing domestic wine market, industry experts say it is more fashionable to drink wine made abroad and predict consumption will double within the next five years.

Favourites include wines from French estates Chateau Lafite Rothschild, which starts around $1,000 a bottle, and Chateau Latour.

“There are at least two layers of wine appreciation inChina. If the person is buying and serving the wine to say thank you very much for someone who has done them a favour, then there is a social going rate which means they will pull out the expensive wine,” said Ch’ng.

“Then you have the same person drinking with friends and family and there is no more status attached to the bottle of wine.”

Wine aficionados say that wine consumption in the mainland has grown in double digit figures over the last 10 years, triggering strong incentives for winemakers and companies to target the lucrative Chinese market, set to strongly outpace Western demand in the coming years.

“AUSPICIOUS” WINE

Chateau Lafite Rothschild has incorporated the Chinese character of the number eight on its vintage 2008 bottles, set to ship in 2011.

The winemaker has not only used the auspicious number “eight” but also the colour red, considered lucky by Chinese custom, to help boost sales.

Chateau Mouton Rothschild has used a design by Chinese artist Xu Lei for its 2008 vintage bottle.

In cosmopolitan cities such asShanghaiandBeijing, there is also robust appetite for wine as an investment class.

Tim Tse, of the House of Roosevelt, a private wine cellar and vault inShanghai, said a select proportion of wealthy Chinese were increasingly starting to collect expensive wine.

“People inShanghaidon’t only drink the wine but they are making an investment in wine. People appreciate wine far more than before. It seems like they have been studying and doing tours in theBurgundyarea,” said Tse, President of Roosevelt China Investments Corp.

Despite this, experts note that many people are drinking expensive wine simply because it is expensive, rather than appreciating the taste.

Vivian Tian, Chief Sommelier at the Waldorf Astoria inShanghai, said the majority of Chinese consumers were still far behind their western counterparts in understanding and appreciating wine.

“The Chinese population is huge, we are still in a developing phase. They are not sophisticated. I don’t know how many yearsChinawill need,” she said.

For the majority of young Chinese professionals, kitted out with their iPads and designer suits, wine is just the latest way to display upward mobility in the increasingly consumer driven society.

“The key inShanghaiis, it is fashionable to drink wine. Every year the growth rate should be double digit, there is no question about that,” Tse said.

 

 

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Lloyd Webber wine sells for £3.5m


 

22 January 2011

Lloyd Webber chose to sell his wine inChina

Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber’s wine collection has sold for US$5.6m (£3.5m) at an auction inHong Kong.

Among the 746 lots, the most expensive case of wine was a Chateau Petrus 1982, 12 bottles going for $77,564 (£48,500).

The collection’s sale price beat previous price expectations and Lord Lloyd Webber said he was pleased.

“I hope the new owners enjoy my wines as much as I have and I look forward to reacquainting myself with them in restaurants all overChina,” he said.

Lord Lloyd Webber, who lives inBerkshire, has collected wine since he was a teenager – when he was said to have had it delivered to his public school, the Telegraph reported.

He said that he sold the wine on Saturday because he did not have the space to store it.

Speaking before the six-hour sale, Serena Sutcliffe, Sotheby’s worldwide head of wine, said: “It’s a great collection and an obvious one for Hong Kong because there is a great love of French wines such asBordeauxandBurgundy.

“It happens to be a category appreciated so much in this region.”

Hong Kong has emerged as the world’s third-largest auction centre afterNew YorkandLondon, helped by the growth ofChina’s economy and the increasing number of millionaires there.

Wine sales have been particularly successful in the former British colony.

Sotheby’s sold about $52m (£32.5m) worth of fine wine in Hong Kong last year, more than twice as much as inLondonand three times as much asNew York.

 

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