From truffles to watches, UAE luxury retail surges

Emirati customers, tourists lead return to luxury shops; Chocolate truffle worth $272 on the market; Auction houses weigh Dubai vs Doha for art sales.
February 10, 2011 1:11 by Reuters
Unemployment and rising food prices may be hurting the poor elsewhere in the Middle East and shaking governments to their foundations.
But in Dubai, whether it’s chocolate truffles at $272 apiece or jewel-encrusted Dior mobile phones, shoppers are biting into luxury retail again after a downturn hit consumer spending in the Gulf Arab emirate.
Dubai’s debt woes and the global financial crisis soured the appetite of the United Arab Emirates’ high-end clientele, but the Gulf financial and tourism hub is striving to win back its crown as a world luxury capital.
Chocopologie, a chocolatier which claims to sell the world’s most expensive truffle “La Madeline au Truffe” for 1,000 dirhams ($272) apiece, opened its boutique cafe in Dubai in December and already plans another in Abu Dhabi.
“Luxury retail demand is rising,” manager Christel Mock said, as she sat in a dark red velvet armchair adorned with gold ornamentation. “Cash is flowing again, and it’s more acceptable to spend money on luxury delicacies.”
Dubai, known for opulent hotels and man-made palm-shaped islands, was the second most attractive city in the world for retailers in 2009, just behind London but ahead of Paris and New York, according to a survey by consultancy CB Richard Ellis.
But retailers in Dubai saw sales slump 45 percent that year when Dubai was hard hit by the global financial crisis and its own real estate crash, according to some industry estimates. Retail started a slow path to recovery in 2010.
The global recession saw luxury items drop off the shelves in status-conscious Dubai before staging a comeback led by demand by wealthy Emiratis and returning tourists from Russia, China and India, retailers and analysts said.
Business activity in the UAE private sector hit an 18-month high in January as orders for non-oil goods and services picked up on stronger domestic demand.
“Emiratis love sweets. My clients are mostly the Emirati elite, a lot of sheikhs and sheikhas,” said Chocopologie’s Mock, with a private lounge where the wealthy and glamourous can sip hot drinks and nibble chocolate delights.
More on Analysis
-
Over 90% of passwords vulnerable to hacking
-
‘Renewable energy absolutely necessary’ – Saudi
-
Real cost of sending your child to a Dubai school
-
BurgerFuel rockets its way across Dubai
-
Middle East deadly virus – what do we call it?
-
Qatar’s Leverage Over Banks Is On The Wane
-
First report by Etisalat covering global footprint
-
Qatar Should Consider More Flexible Exchange Rate – Central Banker
-
Yahoo on Tumblr: ‘we promise not to screw it up’
-
Arabtec workers: strike will continue
-
Kuwait: expats sent packing
-
Dubai Labourers on ‘rare’ labour protest
-
Tumblr officially off the market
-
A major step for Turkey
-
Dusting off the Emirates ID card
-
Turkish Airlines Can Ride Out Turbulence
-
Air Berlin doesn’t need Etihad’s help
-
Turkey’s IMF emancipation deserves cautious cheer
-
Nokia charging back with full force
-
LinkedIn won’t tolerate ‘unlawful’ activities
Lately on Kipp
-
Over 90% of passwords vulnerable to hacking
-
‘Renewable energy absolutely necessary’ – Saudi
-
NEC Display Solutions launches Full HD 3D ready compact meeting room projector
-
Saudi Arabia confirms another death from SARS-like virus
-
When Marketing Academia Met (& Meant) Business
-
Real cost of sending your child to a Dubai school






































