国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

chinadaily.com.cn
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Chinese cyclists in high-end gear change

Updated: 2012-08-20 14:57
By Todd Balazovic, Song Wenwei and Cang Wei ( China Daily)

Top names in two-wheel brands pedaL upmarket

Chinese cyclists are getting an image upgrade as high-end bike manufacturers target the "Kingdom of Bicycles".

Chinese cyclists in high-end gear change

German brand Smart displays its high-end bike model at Asiabike 2012 in Nanjing. [Photo/China Daily]?

While it's always been a favorite of Chinese commuters, more people are turning to top-line bike brands as a sign of status, and ditching their cars on the weekends to glide around town on two wheels.

Nowhere was the new trend more apparent than at the Asiabike 2012 in Nanjing, held in late July, where dozens of the world's upmarket bicycle brands from Wheeler to Trek touted their wares to thousands of Chinese.

Occupying a booth with bikes bearing luxury logos such as Ferrari and Lamborghini, Zhou Jiannong, general manager for bike retailer Rbike, says China's bike culture is slowly changing with the rise in the number of people relying on cars for transportation.

"Ten years ago people would ride their bikes to work, but now most people are driving cars. So, more people are buying bikes for leisure, not for transportation," Zhou says.

With Rbike's Ferrari brand cycles selling for upward of $6,000 - compared with the average Chinese brand selling between 200 yuan ($31.4) and 1,000 yuan - it's clear the company is targeting the country's well-to-do.

"The whole economic model is rising quite quickly and Chinese people are very interested in brands to show their economic success," Zhou says.

"Sometimes they have the car and they want to match their bike with their brand."

As biking becomes more of a recreational pastime than as a means to get from point A to B, Chinese consumers are gearing up more for quality than function.

"People are focusing more on color, design and components," Zhou says.

And while the brand may be a famous name, Zhou argues that the components and engineering for the bikes far exceeds that of cheaper models.

"These bikes will ride smoother than most and are much more difficult to damage," he says.

While the bikes may appeal to China's nouveau riche, for the average Chinese consumers such a high price causes incredulity.

Upon seeing the price of a Ferrari bike, one exhibition visitor said: "You might as well buy a car."

Currently only 20 percent of Rbike's sales are in the domestic market, but Zhou expects them to grow.

For foreign brands such as Giant, Trek and Merida, the growth is already evident.

Giant, one of the largest foreign bike brands operating in China, reported a total of 2,000 brand stores throughout the country, with Merida reporting 1,000.

Trek and Specialize have reported growth rates between 30 and 40 percent, says Knut Jaeger, chairman of the Asiabike 2012.

The potential growth in Chinese consumers buying high-end bikes drew German car producer Mercedes Smart 8,500 kilometers from Germany to Nanjing to showcase its Smart electric bike.

While the numbers look promising, Stephane Koeppel, manager of sales and marketing for Smart's China operation, says they are taking a cautious approach to the market.

"Right now the bikes are not available in China. We are still in the early stages of testing the market," Koeppel says.

Though the price of a Smart bike in China has not yet been determined, in Germany the bikes sell for around 3,000 euros, several times that of a mid-range Chinese-made bike.

In Europe, the bikes have seen steady sales, but China is a very different market, Koeppel says.

China has a strong cycling culture and bike lanes in most major cities, so Smart is not offering anything significantly different than what is already available to Chinese consumers. Both manual and electric bikes have been around for a while and there are dozens of competing domestic brands.

But being a foreign brand in itself is an advantage, Zhou of Rbike says.

For those seeking to buy high-end bikes simply to flaunt wealth, foreign apparently is the way to go.

But for now, Smart and the dozens of others peddling high-priced two-wheelers in Nanjing just need to continue convincing Chinese consumers that the price tag is worth it.

"It's a lifestyle," Koeppel says.

Contact the writers through toddbalazovic@chinadaily.com.cn

...

...
...
海伦市| 香港| 讷河市| 绵阳市| 芦山县| 大方县| 石渠县| 利川市| 双城市| 莱州市| 满洲里市| 英超| 汉沽区| 民勤县| 浦县| 信阳市| 蛟河市| 军事| 安化县| 额尔古纳市| 河西区| 新邵县| 承德市| 贞丰县| 怀宁县| 宣汉县| 东乌珠穆沁旗| 曲麻莱县| 桐柏县| 神木县| 高邮市| 册亨县| 磴口县| 昭平县| 叶城县| 亳州市| 丰都县| 广灵县| 休宁县| 西充县| 外汇|