[BEIJING] Shares of Chinese pop toy maker Pop Mart International Group rose to a record on Wednesday (Aug 20), after founder and chief executive officer Wang Ning said that the company could easily surpass its annual sales projection and announced plans to launch a new mini Labubu in a post-earnings briefing.
Pop Mart was up as much as 8.6 per cent to HK$305, the highest level since the company was listed in December 2020. That reversed earlier losses of up to 4.7 per cent, as some analysts flagged concerns about longer-term demand for Pop Mart’s popular characters.
Pop Mart’s top intellectual property, including the Labubu dolls that have inspired a global collecting frenzy, “still see high uncertainties on long-term popularity”, Morningstar analyst Jeff Zhang said.
Wang told an earnings call that even he’s been unable to accurately predict earnings growth. The CEO said that while earlier this year Pop Mart hoped to hit 20 billion yuan (S$3.6 billion), he now feels 30 billion yuan “will not be that difficult. It would be quite easy”.
A new mini version of Labubu will be launched as soon as this week, Wang added, without giving further details.
Pop Mart’s revenue increased 204 per cent year on year to 13.88 billion yuan in the first half of 2025, according to a company statement on Tuesday. That beat the average analyst estimate of 13.76 billion yuan and compared with 62 per cent growth in the same period a year ago. Net income jumped 397 per cent to 4.6 billion yuan.
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Beijing-based Pop Mart is racing ahead with its global expansion plan, leveraging the worldwide craze over Labubus, plush toys that have turned into a pop culture phenomenon in Western markets, particularly the US. Its overseas revenue grew 440 per cent to 5.6 billion yuan during the first six months of the year.
Pop Mart expects total foreign store numbers to exceed 200 by year-end, up from its current 140, co-chief operating officer Moon Duk II told the earnings call.
Store expansion will remain fast in the US market in the next one to two years, fellow co-COO Si De said.
“We believe Pop Mart’s strong capability in IP incubation and operation and overseas expansion will continue to underpin its solid growth momentum” in the second half, Citigroup analysts including Lydia Ling wrote.
Net store growth in mainland China will not exceed 10 this year, according to Wednesday’s call, as the company wants to focus on improving each existing store’s operations instead of aggressively expanding.
Labubus’ popularity is due in part to the company’s blind-box packaging approach for many of its products, a draw for customers curious about what’s inside. Revenue for The Monsters, the toy series that includes Labubu, reached 4.8 billion yuan, compared with 626.8 million yuan for the same period last year.
Pop Mart will keep expanding its global footprint by establishing offline channels in major landmarks, stepping up investment in its website and self-developed apps, and aiming to collaborate with more international brands and artists, according to its earnings statement. BLOOMBERG