felixp21 wrote:swirler wrote:Maybe these are the price in the overpriced Chinese market and they are being priced the same here so the Chinese don't feel ripped off when they do a Google, sorry, Baidu (or whatever us their CPC-endorsed search engine.) The market for expensive wine is much bigger there I'd have thought. So a few lost sales here will be more than made up by more there as the wine becomes more 'prestigious' (expensive.)
Apologies in advance for the sweeping generations.
not sure what you are getting at, but the Chinese wine drinker (and 99.99% of educated people in China, for that matter) would use exactly the same search engine as you. Everyone here uses VPN, and the internet is as free and easy to use as it is in Melbourne.
FWIW, the Bordelaise quickly learnt the very very hard way that you can't even attempt to rip off the Chinese, they are far too astute for that. If any Aussie winemaker thinks he can sell $200 shiraz in China to the "rich and dumb Chinese who'll buy any 97pt wine", he's in for a rude shock. Apart from Grange and 707, very very few premium Aussie wines are sold here. The Chinese will spend their $200 on French wine, almost every time.
and FWIW, French wines cost about the same in China as they do in Australia. That's why no-one buys them in China, they all buy therm in HK and ship them one way or another
ever wonder why HK, with a population of 7.5 million, is one of the biggest wine centres and sellers in the World??
I'm not going to bother arguing. Let's agree to disagree about most of what you've said