男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
  Chinadaily Homepage
  | Home | Destination Beijing | Sports | Olympics | Photo |  
  2008Olympics > In Depth

Bird's Nest to nest egg

(China Daily)
Updated: 2007-07-13 10:25

Olympic memorabilia in China are starting to resemble stocks on the domestic market: sales are booming and even exorbitant prices are not deterring "investors."


Xu Deshi, who runs 'Waibi Xu',a foreign  coin collection shop in Beijing, looks at a set of silver coins released by China's central bank for the Beijing Olympic Games.The set has risen in value by almost 50 percent in 10 months and is now 2,650 yuan($350).[China Daily]
An Olympic jade seal worth 56,000 yuan ($7,400), or about 20 times the average salary in Beijing, has already sold out at most of the 231 official stores in the capital since it went on sale last year.

Which has had the effect intended by China's policymakers, who have embarked on a common sales strategy of releasing "limited-edition" luxury goods to drive up demand and prices.

"After just over a month, the cost of Olympic coins has skyrocketed," Wang, a man in his late thirties who has been collecting coins for almost two decades, told China Daily on July 3.

"The two Fuwa commemorative coins that were released in 2006 are now worth three times their original retail price," he said.

When the coins first went on sale, some buyers snapped them up by the thousand at just 30 yuan per pair, waiting for the prices to jump.

"There's no doubt that the longer you keep the products, the more money you can make. When I get old and retire, I may think of selling them," said Wang.

Demand for some of the products in the capital has now reached the point where prospective buyers have to make do with placing telephone orders for them and wait it out.

One store near China Millennium Monument is considering upgrading its display to a level that would give a hardened Manhattan shopper a blood rush to the head.

"We're thinking about getting one set of the 290,000-yuan ($38,233) jade Fuwa mascots in our store," said a salesman there.

Released on July 3, only 2,008 sets of the jade Beijing Games mascots are available worldwide, with one set already going to Antonio Samaranch, Honorary President for Life of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), and another to the museum at Beijing's Forbidden City.

With gold bars and silver coins also on offer, it seems that anything minted with an Olympic feature is instantly floggable in China, no matter the cost, or the distance from Beijing, which will serve as the epicenter of the 2008 Games.

"The most expensive item in our store is the Olympic lucky wand, which costs 17,800 yuan ($2,347)," said Ding Ding, a saleswoman at a licensed store in Bayanzhuoer in Inner Mongolia. "We've sold over 10 since May."

Chinese newspapers and television are helping build the hype, and demand, by focusing on related stories, such as the Olympic gold plates autographed by gymnastics queen Liu Xuan and diving king Tian Liang that sold out last month in days.

Now it is becoming difficult for the man in the street to ignore the growing collecting trend. Others are shocked at the escalating prices.

Lian Junjiang is one of the dozens of coin brokers at the stamp and coin market of Madian in northern Beijing. He said most of his customers come from the privileged end of Chinese society.

"These people either come from the media industry, or they're successful in business or they work for the government," said Lian.

The 39-year-old businessman, who also trades in China's stocks and futures market, said the market for Beijing Olympics memorabilia was not yet free, in the economic sense.

State administrators and BOCOG has quotas for distributors of licensed goods to maintain the high demand and price, collectors said.

Back at Madian, the price of stamps and limited-edition phone cards featuring the logo and mascots of the Beijing Games has doubled since their release, while local post offices in Beijing told China Daily they have none available for sale to the public.

"Just a few of the stamps were available when they were launched," said Tu Yueming, who is a collector and a researcher for a State oil company.

"So most of them flow straight into the second-hand market, where the prices tend to jump," he said.

Wang again likened it to the stock market.

"I'd say the 'human element' is the most important factor behind the price surge. Then, as a distant second, come the forces of supply and demand," he said, in an oblique reference to the government's interventionist moves to artificially stabilize the market.

Another collector said he was concerned at how the commercial aspect of memorabilia trading was taking some of the fun and innocence out of it.

"I don't like it when there is too much of an air of business about it," said Liu, a private stamps and pins collector, who declined to reveal his full name. "I like trading my pins with others, without any money involved," he said.

Trading on a one-for-one basis is a common practice among international Olympic collectors.

At previous Olympic Games, non-accredited journalists have even traded pins with spectators in exchange for seats at the competition venues, said photo editor John Glenn, who works for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Some think the buying trend is going to grow and grow.

"I think as the general public hears more and sees more, there will be more of a spending spree for Olympic memorabilia," said Yang Zhou, who owns a licensed store near a well-off neighborhood in western Beijing.

"Some buyers have already inquired about the 290,000 yuan jade Fuwa," he said.



主站蜘蛛池模板: 正宁县| 方正县| 福海县| 西充县| 三穗县| 普安县| 普定县| 阳谷县| 拜泉县| 安吉县| 富顺县| 宁强县| 通化市| 进贤县| 永丰县| 枞阳县| 淮南市| 海南省| 柏乡县| 资源县| 资中县| 泰宁县| 贵港市| 固镇县| 大理市| 金山区| 厦门市| 平阴县| 英吉沙县| 田东县| 桑植县| 京山县| 鄂伦春自治旗| 曲松县| 喜德县| 全椒县| 时尚| 安达市| 偃师市| 肃北| 布尔津县| 凭祥市| 贺州市| 县级市| 临武县| 青岛市| 九江县| 昔阳县| 布尔津县| 东乡县| 新泰市| 汉中市| 禹城市| 巴青县| 玉环县| 南岸区| 壶关县| 平舆县| 万盛区| 盐源县| 广河县| 泾川县| 邛崃市| 宜阳县| 翁牛特旗| 游戏| 屯昌县| 怀远县| 金川县| 宁安市| 赣州市| 海南省| 色达县| 江口县| 邓州市| 揭阳市| 南部县| 白沙| 游戏| 汝阳县| 古丈县| 波密县|