【Madrid, Spai】A Labubu is for Today, a Chanel is Forever: Safe Havens in the Luxury Industry

Editor’s Note

In an era of economic uncertainty, this article explores a fascinating exception within the luxury market: items whose value—rooted in symbolism and culture—not only endures but appreciates. It’s a compelling look at what constitutes true resilience.

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The Resilience of Value

The luxury industry is not immune to the economic fluctuations shaking the globe. All of it? No. There are pieces that, even in turbulent times, increase in price. Their value is not only material but also symbolic and cultural.

Pop Culture vs. Lasting Assets
“Would you pay $170,000 for a Labubu?”

This summer, journalist Elizabeth Gulino posed this question in New York magazine regarding one of those extravagant news stories that sometimes emerge from the world of collecting. The Yongle auction house in Beijing had held its first specialized sale of Labubu dolls, the little monsters with rabbit ears and toothy smiles marketed by the Chinese company Pop Mart. The stars of the event were two life-sized figures that sold for €147,000 and €112,000, in a sale that reached a total of 3.73 million yuan (about €450,000). Undoubtedly, a not insignificant sum for a phenomenon born from collectible dolls whose most basic version costs €30.
The rise of Labubu could be considered another risky drift of pop capitalism, but, as happened not long ago with NFT art, its long-term profitability is doubtful. Investing in such recent objects is a risky maneuver.

Tangible Assets and Precious Metals
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In a different league is the star lot from the Geneva-based house Numismatica Genevensis SA for this autumn: a 1609 Segovian centén, a huge gold coin minted in Spain under Philip III with a starting price of two million Swiss francs (about €2.1 million), which finally sold for over three million euros (specifically, €3,025,739), making it the most expensive European coin ever sold at auction. Facing crypto-skepticism, a 340-gram gold coin, the largest of the 17th century.

“Precious metal coins stand out for their grandeur and unique character,” says the auction house’s CEO, Frank Baldacci. “This piece is exceptional and rare at the same time. In 10 or 15 years, regardless of the world’s socioeconomic situation, it will remain an iconic, unique, and emblematic coin.”

Baldacci confirms that, once the passion for digital artworks and pop art has passed, “more and more people are incorporating this type of object to diversify their collections.” He refers to ancient coins, though not all are valuable.

“Prestigious objects retain their market value, unlike more conventional pieces,” he notes. “Today, gold is attracting renewed interest. Even some cryptocurrency investors are becoming interested in it, for its status as a safe-haven asset capable of withstanding the passage of centuries. In a geopolitically unstable context, marked by wars and uncertainties, gold continues to symbolize stability and security.”

In 2025, even crypto bros recognize that gold is still gold. Precious stones, too.

“Right now, investment prices in jewelry are skyrocketing because gold keeps rising in price,” corroborates Marta Eizaguirre, an expert in jewelry and diamonds, gemologist, and appraiser.

However, she points out, not all that glitters is gold, nor does any jewelry maintain its value over the years.

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“Investing in jewelry and watches requires knowledge, a lot of research, and a lot of patience.”

She mentions the case of a choker that Salvador Dalí made in the sixties for São Schlumberger, which was auctioned at Sotheby’s in October for €736,000. Its materials are unquestionable: gold, diamonds, emeralds, sapphires, and a large pearl.

“But what’s important is its symbolism, the culture it represents,” she explains.
Rarity and Technological Disruption

In the world of investment and collecting, uniqueness is the most prized. Such is the case of the Patek Philippe watch sold in November for over 12 million Swiss francs (over €13 million). It is not made of rose or white gold, but of steel.

“It reached that price because very few units were made of that material,” points out the gemologist.

Technology also imposes its own dynamic. The arrival of lab-grown diamonds, created in machines that replicate the pressure and temperature conditions found inside the earth, threatens to shake one of the world’s most lucrative markets.

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“I believe that, in the long run, it will affect more normal or smaller pieces, diamonds up to five carats, because this technology creates diamond sheets, so it doesn’t allow for creating larger pieces,” explains Eizaguirre. “Therefore, diamonds over 10 carats will indeed appreciate in value.”
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⏰ Published on: November 30, 2025