Staff Writer
Jan 21, 2013

Gome to pull out of Hong Kong, all six stores to be closed by March

HONG KONG - About 100 Gome staff will be made redundant after the mainland retailer confirmed it is closing all six of its Hong Kong stores after nine years.

Gome to pull out of Hong Kong, all six stores to be closed by March

Electrical appliance retailer Gome announced over the weekend that it is changing its business direction in Hong Kong to wholesale and bulk trade.

According to a local Gome spokeswoman, the company hopes to "take advantage of Hong Kong's edge in geographical location, commerce and trade to develop our international procurement business".

Earlier this month, Gome made a 300 million yuan (US$48 million) investment
in Quanfeng Express, a logistics company.

Gome's stores in Kwun Tong, Tai Po, Tsuen Wan, Tuen Mun and Yuen Long will close on 1 February, while its Causeway Bay branch will close on 16 March.

Hong Kong's electronics market is already dominated by Fortress and Broadway, two chains with more muscle in the sector. Efforts by Fleishman-Hillard Hong Kong, which was appointed as Gome's communications consultancy in February 2011, did not manage to achieve a turnaround for the Chinese brand.

Gome opened its first Hong Kong outlet in Mongkok in November 2003 and was listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in 2004. At that time, the now embattled retailer had aimed to seize a 30 per cent share of the Hong Kong market.

In a statement filed to the stock exchange, Gome stated that the outlets operating in Hong Kong "do not form part of the group" and "will not have any impact on the financial position of the group". In its last interim report in 2012, the group had "no assessable profits arising in Hong Kong".

According to the Hong Kong Retail Management Association, in addition to factors like high rent, Hong Kong is not suitable for Gome's hypermarket business model.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Matt McNally returns to Publicis as global CEO of ...

McNally will be based in New York and report to Publicis Groupe CEO Arthur Sadoun.

2 days ago

TikTok launches Messaging Ads in Asia Pacific

TikTok’s Messaging Ads are now available in Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, and Singapore.

2 days ago

Creative Minds: Ya Wen believes creativity can ...

Get to know the visual designer at Tomato Interactive who approaches creativity beyond the next bright and shiny thing.

2 days ago

Creatives pick 2024 work they admire—and are jealous of

Creatives reveal their standout campaigns of 2024 that ignited both admiration and envy, and the lessons these works offer about branding, storytelling, and audience engagement.