【Seoul, South】‘Hyper-Polarization and N-th Price Hikes’… Trends Expected to Penetrate the Korean Luxury Market in the Second Half of the Year

Editor’s Note

This excerpt highlights a growing trend in the luxury market, where exclusivity and high-end positioning are becoming increasingly critical for brands targeting affluent consumers.

빈티지 알함브라 펜던트 말라카이트. (사진=반 클리프 아펠 홈페이지 캡처) *재판매 및 DB 금지
Polarization and High-End Preference
“The trend of super-rich consumers gravitating towards ‘high-end luxury goods’ is expected to intensify further. Luxury brands that have become popular among the masses and thus lost their scarcity will likely lose their appeal going forward.” (A distribution industry official)

Observations suggest that the polarization phenomenon among brands will become more pronounced in the global and domestic luxury markets in the second half of this year.
While the concentration of popularity towards the so-called ‘HeruSha’ (Hermès, Louis Vuitton, Chanel) has been a topic in the luxury market, a solo lead system by Hermès is now becoming evident even among these three major brands. This is due to the continued ‘high-end preference’ of affluent individuals who seek to differentiate themselves from the masses and purchase luxury items with high scarcity, even during economic downturns.

Performance Divergence Among Brands

According to the luxury industry on the 10th, Hermès recorded global sales of 3.9 billion euros (approximately 6.19 trillion KRW) in the second quarter of this year, a 9% increase year-on-year at constant exchange rates. Notably, Hermès drove its performance with balanced growth across all regions, centered on ultra-high-priced product lines like the Birkin and Kelly bags, where supply cannot keep up with demand.

“Globally, first-time buyers are decreasing, and the purchase frequency of the middle class and aspirational shoppers is also declining,” said Axel Dumas, Chairman of Hermès.

Richemont, which owns luxury jewelry brands like Van Cleef & Arpels, also recorded sales of 5.4 billion euros in the second quarter, a 6% growth year-on-year. Its jewelry division led with 11% growth, reconfirming the strength of ultra-high-priced products.
In contrast, LVMH (owner of Louis Vuitton) and Kering Group (owner of Gucci) saw their sales decrease by 4% and 18%, respectively, during the same period.

[서울=뉴시스] 황준선 기자 = 서울 시내 한 에르메스 매장 모습. 2025.01.02. hwang@newsis.com
Market Analysis and Price Hikes

This shift in luxury consumption trends is also detected in the ‘2025 True Luxury Global Consumer Insight Report’ recently published by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) in collaboration with Italy’s Altagamma.
The report analyzed that while the ‘top-tier customers,’ comprising the top 0.1%, account for 23% of global luxury sales and lead the market, the middle class and aspirational shoppers, once considered the entry-level luxury consumers, are seeing their purchasing power diminish due to economic slowdowns and price burdens, gradually weakening their influence.
Amid this situation, the momentum for ‘N-th price hikes’ by luxury brands in the second half shows no signs of cooling. Following the lead of high-end brands, some luxury brands are not hesitating to raise prices to maintain their ‘brand value.’
Particularly in the first half of this year, luxury brands, including ‘HeruSha,’ have been leading price increases. Chanel raised prices for some bags and jewelry products in the domestic market by up to about 10% starting last June. This marks the third price increase for the Chanel brand this year. Louis Vuitton raised prices in January and again in April for representative products like the ‘Alma BB.’ Hermès, like an annual event, kicks off the new year with price hikes. This year, it raised prices for bags and jewelry by around 10% from the beginning of the year.

Rise of the Mint-Condition Secondhand Market

Meanwhile, domestically, consumers with rational spending tendencies are shifting entirely to the secondhand luxury market. Among these, the proportion of ‘mint-condition’ secondhand luxury goods, comparable to new products, is increasing. This is because they can secure near-new quality at lower prices.
Furthermore, according to industry sources, for consumers of high-end brands like Hermès, mint-condition items often serve as an alternative when it is difficult to find desired items in new product boutiques due to high scarcity or when purchase history requirements are insufficient.
Notably, as a prime example, Kangcas Department Store, located in a 12-story single building in Samseong-dong, Gangnam-gu, Seoul, has secured a large volume of goods as Asia’s largest mint-condition luxury shopping center, attracting customers from entry-level to high-end luxury goods.

캉카스백화점 에르메스 민트급 특별 기획전 자료사진 *재판매 및 DB 금지
“In the domestic luxury market, the trends of high-end preference and N-th price hikes are interlinked, while the mint-condition secondhand luxury market is growing as a niche,” said a distribution industry official. “In the past, most secondhand luxury shops operated mainly as online malls or small-scale multi-store operations, but recently, there is a trend of flocking to super-large offline shopping centers where direct ‘luxury product experience shopping’ is possible.”
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⏰ Published on: September 07, 2025