The new prices will take effect from Sept. 1 and will cover more than 10,000 parts. Reductions will average 15%, the statement said. The price of some items, such as windscreens, will be cut by as much as 29%. China has strengthened its regulation of …
If numbers tell the story, then consumers' top choice for new cars in July were Fords and Toyotas. A report by automotive publication Kelley Blue Book (KBB) shows Ford … Not to be outdone in the luxury class, Mercedes-Benz USAreported the highest …
According to research firm Gartner's latest figures, consumers downloaded 103 billion mobile apps across all the available platforms last year. Of these, 91 per cent are estimated to be free. The sheer volume of apps — programs designed for …
"There's no doubt that companies across the spectrum, from Walmart to Louis Vuitton, are working to address the exploding middle-class of consumers that China represents," Doug Stephens, founder of industry website Retail Prophet and author of "The …
“At the very high end, luxury is universal,” Mr. Chan said. “Whether you are in Singapore or New York, luxury consumers want the same things.” The opulence of such an amenity in a city where even shared pools are a rarity isn't lost on Mr. Chan, whose …
Today's luxury consumers desire unique, authentic and inventive forms of experiential travel, and these preferences apply equally to their accommodation and activity choices. To respond to these demands, Luxury Frontiers has developed its Luxury Under …
Speakers from Rebecca Minkoff, Sotheby's, Alice + Olivia, Cartier and more will cover a wide range of crucial luxury industry topics, including the new global reality for brands, leveraging tech to improve brand experience, customer service in the …
Affluent consumers from Seattle to Shanghai have more to spend on luxury goods and are increasingly going online to do it, according to Retail Metrics Inc. That may grab the attention of Amazon.com Inc., said CRT Capital Group LLC. Amazon, whose stock …
Around the time the recession rolled through Europe and the luxury consumers left standing fled from logo-mania and toward the “authentic” and the “rare,” Hanneli Rupert, a South African artist living in London, said that she began to notice “lots of …