China's booming pet market sparks deals

Business Sunday 24/December/2017 12:45 PM
By: Times News Service
China's booming pet market sparks deals

Shanghai: Li Mingjie is a pet industry investor's dream. The 23-year-old e-commerce worker spares little expense to make his pooch happy.
He is far from alone in China these days.
The growth in the middle class, a massive move to urbanisation and other demographic changes — such as growing numbers of elderly, and people getting married and having children later than before — have been turning this into not just a pet-owning society but also one that is prepared to lavish money on them.
Chinese shoppers are set to spend 46.3 billion yuan ($7 billion) on their pets by 2022, up from 17.5 billion yuan this year as the market grows at around an annual 20 per cent, according to estimates from Euromonitor. The US market may be much bigger with an estimated $44.4 billion in sales this year but it is only growing around 2 per cent a year.
The surge in Chinese demand is not only great news for global pet food behemoths such as Mars and Nestle, but also rapidly growing Chinese pet food and product companies, as well as entrepreneurs setting up everything from salons for grooming to fancy pet hotels.
It is an amazing shift in a country where owning pets was once banned for being too much of a bourgeois pursuit under revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, and where — despite protests — there is still an annual festival in the southern Chinese town of Yulin.
"There is huge growth potential in the Chinese market," said Liu Yonghao, the chairman of Chinese company New Hope Group at a recent event in Beijing, noting that younger people especially were developing closer bonds with their pets.
"They are willing to spend lots of money on the pets because they have become like part of the family," he said.
New Hope joined a consortium, including Singapore's state-owned fund Temasek and private equity firm Hosen Capital that just closed a $1 billion deal to acquire Australian pet food maker Real Pet Food, with the aim of bringing the firm’s brands to China.
The growing popularity of pets is turning China into a magnet for local and global firms.
Thomas Kwan, chief investment officer of Hong Kong-based fund manager Harvest Global, said China’s pet market would be one of his personal picks for 2018 as consumers looked to shift up to premium products.
The questions pet owners are asking now: "Can you buy them healthy foods? Can you give them a good lifestyle?" he said.
Pingyang, where Li lives with his poodle, has big ambitions in China's pet economy.
The county, which is near the wealthy city of Wenzhou and has a population of almost one million, is among a slew of places responding to Beijing's call to create 1,000 "specialty towns" by 2020 in industries from cloud computing to chocolate. In Pingyang's case the theme is pets.
It has a bone-shaped visitor centre and pet factories, while locals said there were plans for pet-themed hotels and a retail hub.
On a recent visit, though, it was clear the concept has a way to go. The visitor centre was shut and locals admitted the ‘pet town’ had yet to fully catch on.
Nationally though, there is no doubt that the pet economy is thriving — helped by demographic shifts.
"Chinese society is aging, we're experiencing declining birth rates, we have empty nesters and the youngsters from those empty nests," said Zhang Tianli, co-founder of Hosen Capital, adding pets were helping people find "spiritual sustenance".
The pet products boom has stoked imports and boosted local business.
Among the Chinese companies that are now challenging the global giants, in China at least, are Shanghai Bridge Petcare, Sunsun Group and Navarch. Yantai China Pet Foods has seen its stock climb close to 60 per cent since it listed in Shenzhen in August.
Xiao Xudong in Beijing runs a popular grooming service for "Westies" — West Highland White Terriers — and says his increasingly youthful clientele fly in from regions as remote as far-western Xinjiang and the southwestern Yunnan province.
"Young people hold a different consumption view to the older generations," said Xiao, 45. "They think a lot about how their pets are groomed and are willing to splash out on them.”
Pet bathing
Despite the growth, Chinese pet ownership is still just getting started. Some pets are mistreated and there is a lack of know-how about vaccinations and sterilisation. Strict rules about pet food imports also stoke a grey market trade.
Back in Pingyang's state-sanctioned pet town, the owner of one pet shop said the shift towards pet ownership was nonetheless stark.