China Insight: How Can Fashion Enterprises in China Consolidate Their Moat Three Years Into Pandemic?

The lockdown of Shanghai and other Chinese cities to prevent the spread of COVID-19 has stirred growing pessimism about the performance of global luxury groups as well as the potential impact on the industry due to the closure of offline businesses and suspended logistics.

From Hong Kong to Shenzhen and Shanghai, businesses in cities that play a key role in the fashion economy have been halted or hampered by the pandemic one after the other. What exactly is the situation facing Shanghai and its entire fashion industry that is attracting the world’s attention?

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As the old saying goes, the present is determined by the past. It is important to go through its past before we can understand the current situation because the experiences and strengths accumulated to a certain extent contribute to Shanghai’s resilience in the current situation.

In the 1990s, attracted by Hong Kong’s developed market economy and the huge potential of the mainland, foreign fashion and luxury companies that initiated globalization dropped their “anchor of development” in Hong Kong. The city became the pilot window for international fashion brands to test the Chinese market and communicate with local consumers.

Later, Shenzhen, a city near Hong Kong, developed into the fourth largest in China and the fifth largest financial center in the world as the first special economic zone. In the “Global Fashion City Index” released at the end of last year, Shenzhen ranked among the world’s top six fashion capitals for the fifth consecutive time.

Shenzhen — along with Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong — has formed the front rank of China’s fashion industry, becoming an important symbol and contributing to the improvement of the country’s fashion image on the global stage, marking its progress toward becoming the “third pole of fashion” comparable to Europe and America. Meanwhile, Shanghai, as the city with the country’s largest economic output, is the window of Chinese fashion to the world and the center of the supply chain of the Yangtze River Delta for the domestic market. It is the key connection point between the domestic Chinese and global markets.

At this critical moment, fashion companies headquartered in Shanghai or have strategic layouts in this city are contributing even more. For example:

• K-Boxing menswear has done research and development into a product called the “Angel’s Armor,” which can accommodate all kinds of nucleic acid testing sampling items in a timely manner.