Lao Pu Gold, dubbed one of Hong Kong's "stock market trio," has experienced a stomach-churning rollercoaster ride. The luxury gold retailer's shares exploded over the past year, catapulting from its June 2024 IPO price of HK$40.5 to HK$1,100 – a staggering 20-fold leap that crowned it Hong Kong's top performer with a 41x P/E ratio. This meteoric rise earned it equal footing with Pop Mart and Mixue Ice City in the "trio" moniker. Yet gravity struck violently starting July 9, as shares nosedived from HK$1,080 to HK$888 by July 15, wiping out 18% of its value and exposing cracks in its "Hermès of Gold" facade.
Investor forums now echo with distress signals. "Stuck holding bags at HK$1,000+," laments one. "My wife went all-in at HK$1,100 without telling me – we're fighting," vents another. These voices contrast sharply with last year's euphoria, fueled by explosive 2024 results: revenue rocketed 166% to RMB9.8 billion while net profit surged 254% to RMB1.47 billion.
The sudden reversal stems from structural tremors. Lao Pu Gold filed in April to convert 40.39 million non-tradable shares into H-shares. More crucially, June 28 unleashed its largest lockup expiration: 142.64 million shares (86.44% of equity) held by 12 shareholders became freely tradable. Though no mass sell-off emerged, this Damocles sword hovers as funds show contradictory behavior. Wind data reveals fund ownership ballooned 142% to 46 institutions by Q1 2025 – yet their collective stake shrank 10.6%, signaling fragmented new capital from smaller funds amid deepening institutional skepticism.
Wall Street analysts diverge sharply. Citi maintains a "buy" rating, touting a 30x forward P/E and triggering a 30-day catalyst watch post-selloff. UBS strikes a cautionary note, warning that investor projections of RMB4-6 billion 2025 profits (170%-300% growth) appear inflated. The Swiss bank flags triple threats: gold price volatility, inconsistent store performance, and compressed gross margins – compounded by shareholder profit-taking risks.
At the heart of the turbulence lies an existential question: Can Lao Pu Gold's astronomical premium hold? Founder Xu Gaoming's bravado – vowing to shutter stores with under RMB500 million sales while targeting RMB1 billion average store revenue – directly challenges Hermès: "If gold sellers can't outsell leather goods, we should reconsider our business." The brand meticulously cultivates luxury credentials through prime mall placements beside Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels, serving Evian water and Godiva chocolates while deploying scarcity tactics.
Yet its premium foundations face erosion. Recent price hikes occurred alongside surging gold prices, obscuring true design/artisan premiums. Complaints now flood platforms about abrupt discounts, like a customer who paid RMB62,000 for a pendant only to see it slashed RMB6,182 weeks later during promotions. "Are we just ATMs?" they fumed, rejecting the "unpredictable promotions" defense.
Competitive moats appear equally vulnerable. Its ancient-style gold craftsmanship battles Chow Tai Fook, Caibai, Luk Fook, and Shenzhen Shuibei wholesalers – while outsourcing 40% of production undermines "unique artistry" claims. The 990-purity gold (versus industry-standard 999) also draws consumer hesitation online.
New rivals circle ominously. While Lao Pu Gold dazzles in SKP galleries, Lin Chao Jewelry amasses 1.3 million Douyin followers (versus Lao Pu's 110,000) with similar heritage techniques. Junpei Jewelry meanwhile attracts young elites by blending tradition with everyday wearability.
Ultimately, Lao Pu Gold must prove whether Hermès-inspired branding can sustainably command premiums in a commodity where metal value dominates. Its survival hinges on convincing customers to pay for the "Lao Pu" mystique – not just gold weight or marketing razzle-dazzle.