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Country Report

Housewares and Home Furnishings in France

Nov 2009

Price: $1,100

About this Report

About this Report

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Overview

Discover the latest market trends and uncover sources of future market growth for the Housewares and Home Furnishings industry in France with research from Euromonitor's team of in-country analysts.

Find hidden opportunities in the most current research data available, understand competitive threats with our detailed market analysis, and plan your corporate strategy with our expert qualitative analysis and growth projections.

If you're in the Housewares and Home Furnishings industry in France, our research will save you time and money while empowering you to make informed, profitable decisions.

The Housewares and Home Furnishings in France market research report includes:

  • Analysis of key supply-side and demand trends
  • Detailed segmentation of international and local products
  • Historic values, company and brand market shares
  • Five year forecasts of market trends and market growth
  • Robust and transparent market research methodology, conducted in-country

Our market research reports answer questions such as:

  • What is the market size of Housewares and Home Furnishings in France?
  • What are the major brands in France?
  • What is the potential growth for houseware markets globally?
  • Which housewares format (ceramic, metal, wooden, glass and plastic) are driving global sales?
  • Are carpets, furniture or soft furnishings adding more to sales each year?
  • In which markets are furniture and furnishing stores taking sales from mixed retailers?

Why buy this report?

  • Gain competitive intelligence about market leaders
  • Track key industry trends, opportunities and threats
  • Inform your marketing, brand, strategy and market development, sales and supply functions

This industry report originates from Passport, our Housewares and Home Furnishings market research database.

Sample Analysis

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Crisis affects market after positive performance in 2007

The year 2007 was a very good one for the housewares and home furnishings markets, in which total sales reached €16.6 billion, up by 4.7% from their 2006 level. This growth was driven mainly by home furnishings, and particularly furniture. Sales of furniture recorded their highest growth in 30 years, at 7.3%, while accounting for 58.1% of total sales.

Like other consumer markets, the housewares and home furnishings sectors started to feel the effects of the crisis towards the end of 2008. The decline was less marked than in some sectors, because of the resilience of the furniture subsector, which accounts for more than half of sales in the combined market. Sales fell sharply at the beginning of 2009, however, reflecting a general slow-down in consumer spending, which was in part a reaction to the global economic uncertainty.

A market driven by decoration

The French are increasingly interested in decoration. They are carrying out more home improvements and renewing their interiors more often. Purchases of housewares and home furnishings are no longer regarded as lifetime investments but increasingly viewed as impulse purchases and items bought for pleasure, in keeping with fashion trends. Many retailers understand this indicates that there is a huge enormous potential for growth in sales, and they are therefore focusing their efforts on this segment. Decoration can represent up to 50% of sales for IKEA or Fly, and many new entrants to the market – such as Zara Home and JYSK – are also putting decoration at the centre of their offers.

The success of the “young housing” segment

In 2008, IKEA, initiator of the “young housing” model, overtook Conforama to became market leader in home furnishings (with a value share of 15.6%). Other young housing brands such as Fly and Alinéa also performed well in 2007 and 2008. The current runner-up Conforama and third-ranking But now wish to fight back to regain market share with new strategies, including a return to the “right” price point, but this will be a difficult process. IKEA offers an innovative concept, a very wide product range, attractive designs at affordable prices and innovative services, all of which are attracting more customers within France.

Increased competition

The potential for continued growth in sales of decorating and home equipment is still attracting some new players into the market. New concepts are emerging or gaining ground. Zara Home continues to develop its presence in city centres, while new discount stores such as JYSK and Internet suppliers are competing directly with existing brands.

The home furniture market has been the subject of fierce competitive pressures, which have led many retailers to reduce their prices, thereby undermining the total value of their sales. In particular, the entry of discounters as new players in the market and the growing trend towards sourcing products from low-cost producers in China are driving down prices, which is causing distress to some mainstream retailers.

This intensification of competition, in combination with the effects of the current crisis, may lead to concentration within the sector.

A decreasing market in the long term

Overall value sales are expected to decrease by a total of 0.4% over the forecast period to €16.3 billion in 2013. Average prices should continue to fall because of the increase in the share of imported goods and the current trend towards purchasing less expensive items that may be replaced in time.

The two markets are expected to behave quite differently, however, since sales of housewares are projected to exhibit a significant decline over the forecast period as a whole (-10.5%), while those of home furnishings will continue to display positive growth (1.7%), driven by the strong performance of furniture sales.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Housewares and home furnishings in France - Industry Overview

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Crisis affects market after positive performance in 2007

A market driven by decoration

The success of the “young housing” segment

Increased competition

A decreasing market in the long term

KEY TRENDS AND DEVELOPMENTS

A sector hardly hit by the crisis

French buy more housewares and home furnishings on the net

More eco-friendly products

Trend towards multifunctional furniture

More actors attracted by the potential of decoration

MARKET DATA

DEFINITIONS

  • Summary 1 Research Sources

Housewares and home furnishings in France - Company Profiles

Arc International - Housewares and Home Furnishings - France

STRATEGIC DIRECTION

KEY FACTS

COMPANY BACKGROUND

PRODUCTION

COMPETITIVE POSITIONING

  • Summary 3 Arc International: Competitive Position 2008

But SAS - Housewares and Home Furnishings - France

STRATEGIC DIRECTION

KEY FACTS

COMPANY BACKGROUND

PRODUCTION

COMPETITIVE POSITIONING

  • Summary 6 BUT SAS : Competitive Position 2008

IKEA France Snc (Meubles) - Housewares and Home Furnishings - France

STRATEGIC DIRECTION

KEY FACTS

COMPANY BACKGROUND

PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION

COMPETITIVE POSITIONING

  • Summary 9 IKEA France SNC (Meubles): Competitive Position 2008

Jysk France SA - Housewares and Home Furnishings - France

STRATEGIC DIRECTION

KEY FACTS

COMPANY BACKGROUND

PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION

COMPETITIVE POSITIONING

Zara Home Francia, SARL - Housewares and Home Furnishings - France

STRATEGIC DIRECTION

KEY FACTS

COMPANY BACKGROUND

PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION

COMPETITIVE POSITIONING

  • Summary 13 Zara Home: Competitive Position 2008

Home furnishings in France - Category Analysis

HEADLINES

TRENDS

  • Sales of home furnishings displayed a very positive performance in 2007, rising by 6.2% to reach €13.8 billion, but then began to decline in 2008, falling by 1.1% because of a deterioration of the economic environment. The recession had visible consequences on households’ morale and purchasing power and a consequent negative impact on sales.

COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE

  • The home furnishings market is in the hands of four main players (IKEA, Conforama, But and Fly), which accounted for almost 50% of sales in 2008. These four giants own just 7% of the country’s outlets but their selling surfaces comprise between 1,000 and 30,000 square metres (compared with an industry average of 20–400 square metres). They also sell other products such as domestic electronics products, lighting or decoration products, which may represent up to half their turnover.

PROSPECTS

  • The year 2009 is project to be a difficult one for the home furnishings market, with a forecast decline in sales of 3.7%. The economic crisis and the decline in households’ consumption are expected to impact on all subsectors including furniture, which accounts for the bulk of sales.

New Product Developments

SECTOR DATA

Housewares in France - Category Analysis

HEADLINES

TRENDS

  • Value sales of housewares fell by 3.6% in 2008. Sales in all subsectors declined, but the worst affected was cutlery, with a decline of 5.0%. The deterioration of the economic environment and the increase in the proportion of products manufactured in low-cost countries contributed to the decline in prices.

COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE

  • The housewares segment remains extremely fragmented, and this pattern has only been reinforced by the entry of new players into the market.

PROSPECTS

  • As in most sectors, sales of housewares are expected to suffer from the economic slow-down, and they are projected to decline by 3.3% in 2009.

New Product Developments

SECTOR DATA

Segmentation

Segmentation

This market research report includes the following:

  • Housewares and Home Furnishings
    • Housewares
      • Cookware
      • Kitchenware
      • Tableware and crockery
      • Cutlery
      • Glassware
    • Home furnishings
      • Carpets and other floorcoverings
      • Furniture
      • Household textiles and soft furnishings

Statistics Included

Statistics Included

For each category and subcategory you will receive the following data in Excel format:

From Passport

  • Market Size
  • Market Share
  • Brand share
  • Distribution
  • Analysis by Type

Market size details:

  • Retail Value retail selling price % growth
  • Retail Value retail selling price local currency, USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY
  • Retail Value retail selling price per capita local currency, USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY
  • Retail Value retail selling price real (constant 2008) Prices % growth
  • Retail Value retail selling price real (constant 2008) Prices local currency, USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY
  • Retail Value retail selling price real (constant 2008) Prices per capita local currency, USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY
  • Retail Value retail selling price Nominal (Current) Prices % growth
  • Retail Value retail selling price Nominal (Current) Prices local currency, USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY
  • Retail Value retail selling price Nominal (Current) Prices per capita local currency, USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY

Methodology

Methodology

Global insight and local knowledge

With 40 years’ experience of developed and emerging markets, Euromonitor International’s research method is built on a unique combination of specialist industry knowledge and in-country research expertise.

This approach is what enables us to achieve our goal of building a market consensus view of size, shape and trends across the full distribution universe of each category. We factor in whichever channels are relevant, from large-scale grocery to direct sellers, from discount stores to local mom-and-pop outlets.

Industry specialists

Each industry we cover is managed by an Industry Manager and team of Industry Analysts who research and report on their specialist categories all year round.

Our collaborative approach to research means that these industry teams are in constant dialogue with industry players and opinion formers. The planning of our research programmes reflects latest market trends and industry events. In completing each update project, this provides invaluable input to the testing, review and finalisation of our data.

The specialist in-house teams bring together findings from all stages of the annual research process. They work closely with in-country analysts, assess and challenge data and exercise final editorial control over the publication of new data and analysis.

Country and regional analysts

Our in-country analyst network is managed by country and regional analysts in our offices around the world. Working closely with each in-country team, the regional research management team ensures that all country researchers are well schooled in best practices, from the information collected in store checks, to the dialogue we build in trade surveys. Our country analysts ensure that national reports explain the data trends and provide clear insights into the local market’s dynamics.

In-country research network

To deliver fresh insights every year in countries all around the world, we believe the strongest approach is to use analysts on the ground. They bring fluency in local language, physical proximity to the best sources, an ability to engage directly with local industry contacts, and an awareness of how the products and services we study are advertised, sold and consumed. These are essential parts of our ability to report incisively on these markets.

Research Methodology

Our research methods

Each Euromonitor International industry report is based on a core set of research techniques:

Desk research

With industry events, corporate activity, trends and new product introductions tracked year round by our industry team, desk research provides a starting point for the in-country research programme. Our in-country researchers will access the following sources:

  • National statistics offices governmental and official sources
  • National and international trade press
  • National and international trade associations
  • Industry study groups and other semi-official sources
  • Company financials and annual reports
  • Broker reports
  • Online databases
  • The financial, business and mainstream press

Accessing sources is only the first step. The ability to interpret and reconcile often conflicting information across multiple sources is a key aspect of the added value we provide.

Store checks

Store checks are an integral part of our methods for product industries. Carried out on the ground across a relevant mix of channels, the information gained provides first-hand insights into the products we are researching, specifically:

  • Place: We track products in all relevant channels, selective and mass, store and non-store
  • Product: What are innovations in products, pack sizes and formats?
  • Price: What are brand price variations across channels, how do private label’s prices compare to those of branded goods?
  • Promotion: What are marketing and merchandising trends, offers, discounts and tie-ins?

Findings are cross-referenced with brand share data analysis. The results, combined with the findings of desk research, provide a strong basis for identifying key areas of questioning to take forward into our trade survey.

Trade survey

Interaction with global players at corporate HQ and regional levels is complemented by unique local data and insights from our in-country trade surveys around the world. Through the high profile of the Euromonitor International brand, we are able to talk directly to a wide range of sources and therefore inform our analysis with the knowledge and opinions of the leading operators in the market.

Trade surveys allow us to:

  • Fill gaps in available published data per company
  • Generate a consensus view of the size, structure and strategic direction of the category
  • Access year-in-progress data where published sources are out of date
  • Evaluate the experts’ views on current trends and market developments

In building our composite industry view, we engage with a variety of personnel in key players at all points of the supply chain: materials suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, retailers and service operators. We also interview desk research sources: industry associations; study groups; and third party observers from the trade and financial press.

Our objective is to engage in conversation with trade sources in which we exchange ideas and views on the industry, sharing our work-in-progress findings on supply/demand dynamics and potential. This dialogue enhances both parties’ understanding of the local market. The scope and reach of our trade survey also serves to eliminate bias (intentional and unintentional) from any single source.

Company analysis

At a global level, our company research combines our mix of industry interaction and use of secondary sources such as annual accounts, broker reports, financial press and databases. From a data perspective, the aim is to build “top-down” estimates of major players’ total global and regional sales.

At a country level, in line with local reporting requirements, we access annual accounts, national-specific company databases and local company websites. These are all invaluable sources as we build a view of each domestic player’s size and position within very specific categories of the industry.

Forecasts

Data projections and future performance analysis are key elements of Euromonitor International’s market intelligence. Working with historic trends of 15 years or more, a key aspect of our trade survey is to engage industry insider views of the next five years. Will volumes maintain their historic trend? Will price increases or falls of recent years continue, accelerate or slow down? Will increasing demand for one product cannibalise sales of another?

Forecasts represent many of the essential conclusions we have reached about the current state of the market, how it works and how it behaves under different macro and micro conditions. Our written analysis will state the assumptions and the trade opinion behind whether our predictions are optimistic or pessimistic, so that clients can use our statistical forecasts with confidence.

Data validation

All data is subjected to an exhaustive review process, at country, regional and global levels.

The interpretation and review of sources and data inputs forms a central part of the collaboration between industry teams and country researchers. Numbers are delivered to regional and global offices with an audit trail of sources and calculations to allow for a thorough evaluation of data sense and integrity.

Upon completion of the country review phase, data is then reviewed on a comparative basis at regional and then at a global level. Comparative checks are carried out on per capita consumption and spending levels, growth rates, patterns of category and subcategory breakdowns and distribution of sales by channel. Top-down estimates are reviewed against bottom-up regional and global market and company sales totals.

Where marked differences are seen between proximate country markets or ones at similar developmental levels, supplementary research is conducted in the relevant countries to confirm and/or amend those findings. This process ensures international comparability across the database, that consistent category and subcategory definitions have been used and that all data has been correctly tested. We make sure that possible discrepancies between different published sources have been reconciled and that our interpretation of opinion and expectation from each country’s trade sources has been applied to form a coherent international pattern.

Market analysis

Another integral part of all our research programmes is that all Euromonitor International data is accompanied by clear written analysis. From a research perspective, this explains and substantiates data findings. From a client perspective, this offers unique insights into local consumption trends, routes to market, brand preferences, channel dynamics and future trends.

Our country level analysis also provides invaluable input into the ability of our central industry specialist teams to marry local insights with strategic conclusions on the direction of the market regionally and globally.

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