- Amazon launched a new luxury fashion section called Luxury Stores on its mobile app in the US, featuring a single brand, Oscar de la Renta, at first.
- Major luxury brands like LVMH, Kering and Hermes have refused to participate, wary of diluting their exclusive brand image and concerned about counterfeits.
- While Amazon aims to attract high-spending luxury shoppers, it faces competition from established online luxury retailers and skepticism that it can convince top brands to sell on its platform.
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Can amazon upend the luxury sector?
1. Luxury goods
Can Amazon upend the luxury sector?
Ecommerce giant’s long-awaited foray will need to convince brands and consumers
Amazon’s Luxury Stores is only available by invitation to Prime customers in the US
Leila Abboud in Paris OCTOBER 9 2020
When Amazon expanded into US groceries and healthcare, the established players
in the sector feared the arrival of a rich, tech-savvy disrupter. But when the
ecommerce giant unveiled its long- awaited foray into luxury goods last month, the
response was a collective shrug.
Amazon opened its Luxury Stores as a separate space on its mobile app, which is
available only in the US “by invitation” to subscribers to its Prime loyalty scheme.
Instead of its usual utilitarian look, the app tries to conjure up a luxury ethos with a
gold logo against a cream-coloured background. It was launched with an ad
featuring British actress Cara Delevingne.
But while industry executives were publicly polite, privately many mocked the launch
for being late to the game and going live with only a single brand: dressmaker Oscar
de la Renta.
Frederic Court, whose venture capital fund Felix Capital was an early backer of
online fashion marketplace Farfetch, said Amazon would struggle to break into
luxury’s exclusive club.
“If they decide to have a real go, they may get somewhere given they have so much
talent, capital, and logistics and delivery expertise,” said Mr Court. “But if you don’t
have Gucci, Saint Laurent, Prada and Dior, then it’s hard to be a real destination for
luxury shoppers. You need the brands you can find on Avenue Montaigne in Paris.”
3. Meanwhile, after years of declining sales, the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic
has finally killed off several US-based department stores, such as Lord & Taylor,
while forcing others like Neiman Marcus to restructure. This has deprived
independent fashion brands of their main distribution channel and some are
scrambling for alternatives, including selling more via their own websites and online
stores. Critics said Amazon’s Luxury Stores may face a reverse selection bias, where
it is most likely to attract accessibly priced or struggling brands.
Ecommerce has momentum: by 2025, consultancy Bain & Company estimates
that roughly one- third of luxury’s annual sales will be made online, up from 12 per
cent of total sales of €281BN in 2019. The shift is being driven by millennials and
customers in China — both the world’s most advanced ecommerce market and the
fastest-growing market for luxury goods.
Amazon is entering luxury after years of expanding in mid-market fashion via
acquisitions of online shoe seller Zappos and clothing outlet Shopbop.
So far, it has given few details on its ambitions for Luxury Stores and declined an
interview request. “Fashion is a priority for our customers and therefore a priority for
us worldwide,” it said in an
emailed statement. “We’re just at the beginning of what we expect to accomplish.”
Amazon’s pitch to brands is that it can help them create “innovative, content-driven tools” to
engage with shoppers, such as its View in 360 button that allows people to visualise
how a garment will look on various body types.
In an attempt to allay fears about eroding the exclusivity of the online experience,
the store will be walled off from the broader website. And most importantly,
participating brands will control the design of their shop within the app, as well as
being able to select what items are sold on there and at what price. This is known in
the industry as a concession or marketplace model, and was adopted by Farfetch
and Alibaba’s Tmall Luxury Pavilion.
It contrasts with the so-called wholesale model used by online retailers, department stores, and
rival online seller Yoox Net-a- Porter. Those companies buy inventory from fashion
brands, store it in their warehouses, and then can offer discounts if it does not sell at
full price.
Luxury brands tend to prefer the concession model because it offers more control,
less discounting, and ability to move inventory. But their ideal model is to sell
directly on their own-branded
websites where they do not have to give away any commission and do not dilute
their brand equity, industry executives said. Customers can be drawn in by
Instagram or TikTok posts from brands, or with well-placed links on Google
searches for products.
5. For Amazon, the plan is that more brands follow Oscar de la Renta, which sees its
partnership with the ecommerce giant as a good way to reach more customers and
glean additional insights into their desires. “It’s a super challenging time right now
with the pandemic,” said Alex Bolen, the chief executive of Oscar de la Renta. “It is all
about learning. Amazon is going to help us become a better merchant.”
Additional reporting by Lauren Indvik in London
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2020. All rights reserved.