Pop Mart’s Labubu Risks Beanie Baby-Style Bust, Analyst Says

Pop Mart’s Labubu Risks Beanie Baby-Style Bust, Analyst Says

Pop Mart’s Labubu Risks Beanie Baby-Style Bust, Analyst Says

The euphoria surrounding Pop Mart International Group Ltd.’s Labubu toys is starting to resemble the boom-and-bust cycle that ended in the collapse of Beanie Babies in the 1990s, according to the only analyst with a sell rating on Pop Mart shares.

The hype over the sharp-fanged monster dolls is about to peak, and doubts about the next sales driver for Pop Mart suggest its shares have limited upside, said Melinda Hu, a senior research analyst for Asia consumer stocks at Bernstein in Hong Kong.

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“The scarcity, the hunt, the dopamine hit and the secondary market” fueling Labubu’s popularity resembles the speculative cycle of Beanie Babies, Hu said. “I wouldn’t advise long-term investors to add the shares without fundamental changes” in the company’s strategy, she said.

The golden era of Pop Mart shares may already be over. The company’s Hong Kong-listed stock has dropped more than 30% from its high in August, with some of the losses taking place after an employee was heard questioning the price of one of its blind-box products during a live-streaming event. The pullback has come after a rally that saw shares surge more than 1,500% from the start of last year to their August high.

No fewer than 42 of the 46 analysts covering Pop Mart still have a “buy” or equivalent rating on Pop Mart, and three others label it a “hold,” according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The shares have fallen about 25% since Hu initiated her coverage of the Beijing-based toy firm with an “underperform” rating on Oct. 16.

Labubu dolls on display at Pop Mart’s “Monsters by Monsters: Now and Then” 10-year anniversary exhibition in Shanghai last month.Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Labubu dolls on display at Pop Mart’s “Monsters by Monsters: Now and Then” 10-year anniversary exhibition in Shanghai last month.Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

Hu, who has worked at Bernstein for about seven years, currently covers 10 companies including ANTA Sports Products Ltd. and Shiseido Co. Investors who followed her recommendations would have made an average loss of 5% over the past six months, compared with an average decline of 2.7% for her peer analysts, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Trader positioning shows rising doubts over Pop Mart’s near-term performance. So-called short interest in the stock as a percentage of its total free float climbed to 2.8% as of Thursday, the highest level since April 2024, according to data from S&P Global Inc.

Beanie Babies, a range of animal-shaped plush toys stuffed with plastic pellets, boomed in value during the late 1990s until they came to be considered a financial investment. The bubble burst around 1999 and the toys, created by unlisted company TY Inc., are now mostly worthless.

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