logo
From Labubu to Ne Zha: toy craze fans Pop Mart's market-beating stock rally

From Labubu to Ne Zha: toy craze fans Pop Mart's market-beating stock rally

Fresh from its success with Labubu, Pop Mart International is on another hot streak in intellectual property (IP) merchandising as consumers snap up its toys based on China's highest-grossing Ne Zha 2 , leading US investment bank Morgan Stanley to name the stock among its top picks.
Pop Mart's Ne Zha toys sold out days after their release on January 30 as the animation broke local box-office records, according state-run China Movie Database on Thursday. The sequel also overtook The Battle at Lake Changjin in all-time ticket sales following its stellar Lunar New Year holiday run. The frenzy is a repeat of Pop Mart's success in capitalising on its Labubu toys, a toothy but adorable elfin beloved by millions of Asian fans, including a member of K-pop group Blackpink. The formula helped propel its sales outside mainland China and fan a 350 per cent rally in its stock in Hong Kong last year.
'We expect Pop Mart to become one of the go-to partners for global major IP owners that intend to monetise and extend IP popularity through IP toys,' Morgan Stanley analysts including Dustin Wei and Carol Xia said in a report. Its success underlines its influence in the IP strategy, they added. A Ne Zha movie poster outside a cinema in Hangzhou.
Third-party IPs like Ne Zha only counted for 15 to 20 per cent of Pop Mart's revenue, but they helped the brand gain new customers effectively, the analysts said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Return of Nvidia H20 chip to China clears major AI upgrade bottleneck, Morgan Stanley says
Return of Nvidia H20 chip to China clears major AI upgrade bottleneck, Morgan Stanley says

South China Morning Post

time8 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Return of Nvidia H20 chip to China clears major AI upgrade bottleneck, Morgan Stanley says

The sales resumption of Nvidia's H20 chips in mainland China will clear a hardware bottleneck and boost the country's ambitions in artificial intelligence despite lingering supply uncertainties about the highly sought-after processor, according to Morgan Stanley. The lifting of US export restrictions on the H20 'removes a key near-term headwind' for China's AI development, and AI spending by China's major cloud service providers was set to increase by around 60 per cent to 380 billion yuan (US$53 billion) this year, the US investment bank said in a report on Sunday. The outlook was positive for China's access to computing power and the US chipmaker's growth, despite questions about the supply of H20 chips, analysts said. Nvidia told its Chinese customers that the supply of the chips would be limited and that it did not plan to restart production of the model, according to a report on Saturday by technology media outlet The Information. However, Jensen Huang, Nvidia's co-founder and CEO, told Chinese media last week in Beijing that it currently took Nvidia about nine months from the placement of wafer orders to the delivery of finished chips, and that the company was 'working at full speed to restore the production capacity'. Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday. Nvidia announced last week that it received US government approval to resume sales of the H20, a powerful graphics processing unit (GPU) specifically designed for the Chinese market to comply with US export control measures. Released in early 2024, the H20 was the top chip used by Chinese tech firms for AI training before Washington blocked its sale in April.

Hong Kong customs ‘powerless to stop fake Labubu, Chiikawa toys without records'
Hong Kong customs ‘powerless to stop fake Labubu, Chiikawa toys without records'

South China Morning Post

time2 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong customs ‘powerless to stop fake Labubu, Chiikawa toys without records'

Hong Kong customs has approached the trademark owners of popular brands Labubu and Chiikawa to establish records that will help combat counterfeits, with the Post learning the city currently has no way of cracking down on fakes featuring the characters. Advertisement The distributor of hugely popular doll Labubu, Pop Mart, and Nagano Co, the firm that registered the trademark for Japanese manga character Chiikawa, have not completed recordation procedures needed by the Customs and Excise Department to root out fakes, according to a source. A customs spokesman said the department had contacted the trademark owners. 'The department is greatly concerned about the matter and has proactively reached out to the relevant trademark owners for liaison and follow-up [action],' he said. The source said that trademark holders had a procedure to conduct with customs' Recordation Office so the department could investigate suspected piracy or counterfeiting activities and seize goods. Advertisement 'Customs cannot act upon any suspected fake dolls if there is no recordation with the department,' the source said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store