The Jerusalem Post

From wine to watches, sharing and rental websites offer slice of luxury

- • By SARAH WHITE and SILKE KOLTROWITZ

PARIS/ZURICH (Reuters) – Online platforms offering rentals or shares in everything from glitzy watches to sports cars are making inroads in the luxury-goods market as a shift in consumer habits begins to head up-market.

Playing off the sharing-economy model popularize­d by the likes of Airbnb, such companies invite people to enjoy luxury brands without spending a fortune. For example, a fixed monthly fee gives a consumer use of a Rolex watch for a few weeks, which they then send back to exchange for another luxury brand.

Businesses say the market for renting or co-investing in everything from jewelry to fine art is taking off with moderately welloff clients aspiring to a taste of the high life – and potentiall­y the seriously wealthy.

“The modern generation leads a very different life; people want to keep their options open,” said Marco Abele, who formerly worked in digital banking at Credit Suisse and is now developing sharing platform TEND.

The platform, which is set to launch in Switzerlan­d in March, offers people ways of buying tradable stakes in a Porsche or a vineyard for a return on their investment and a chance to go for occasional spins in the car or get customized bottles.

While aiming to “democratiz­e” luxury, its target customers are not quite every man or woman: Their net worth would be about 100,000 to 1 million Swiss francs ($1m.), Abele said.

While still small, the sharing economy is predicted to grow from around $15 billion in 2016 to $335b. by 2025, according to Pricewater­houseCoope­rs. Luxury is only a small part of that, but it has potential.

“It’s not a significan­t market, but it’s getting under way. It will become more significan­t,” Boston Consulting Group luxury specialist Olivier Abtan said. “There are a lot of start-ups and especially young people piling into this.”

Eleven James, a US-based watch-rental site launched in 2014, is considerin­g moving into jewelry and artworks and may expand overseas, chief executive Olivier Reza said.

The company – whose monthly fees range from $150 to $500, depending on the value of the watches – used to rent out its own stock. But in November it opened up to collectors wanting to lease their timepieces.

“This mainly came about because of consumer demand,” Reza said. “People have more watches. They can’t wear them all at once; they tire of them.”

TEST BEFORE BUYING

For some luxury manufactur­ers, this budding market may be an unwelcome developmen­t.

They had only just started to make peace with e-commerce, having long been afraid that online sales might dilute their brands, and are still fighting to control distributi­on, resisting moving onto mainstream sites such as Amazon.

Now they run the risk of missing out on sales as people rent a piece of the luxury they offer, making items more accessible and ubiquitous, thereby underminin­g their exclusivit­y.

Still, rentals of evening dresses or designer items by Chanel or Louis Vuitton have long existed, as have co-investment­s in assets such as private jets and yachts. Online platforms offer a means of rapidly expanding such services.

For watch enthusiast Chi Chan, 43, a New York-based IT developer who has consigned four watches to Eleven James, the rental site is an easy way of testing before buying.

“It is very intimidati­ng sometimes to go to a boutique with the salespeopl­e judging you,” said Chan, suggesting online leasing was less pressured.

 ?? (Valentin Flauraud/Reuters) ?? A STAFF MEMBER displays a 1938 18-karat Patek Philippe gold chronograp­h wristwatch with a two-tone champagne sector dial during an auction preview at Christie’s in Geneva.
(Valentin Flauraud/Reuters) A STAFF MEMBER displays a 1938 18-karat Patek Philippe gold chronograp­h wristwatch with a two-tone champagne sector dial during an auction preview at Christie’s in Geneva.

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