The pro-longed Covid-19 pandemic has given rise to running and other forms of exercise including home fitness regimes. This new norm coupled with the existing demand for activewear to be worn as daily wear, have led consumers in Southeast Asia to spend more on the segment as it enters essential consumption.
While athleisure-inspired and performance footwear leads activewear in the region, there are opportunities in the other categories. This report shares the five next growth opportunities of activewear, in a region that will become the world’s fourth-largest economy worth approximately $4 trillion USD by the next decade.
Exactly 69,121 data points were analysed from October 2019 to September 2020 (last 12 months) on womenswear and menswear from Nike, Adidas, Under Armour, New Balance and Puma, including both mono-brand and multi-label retailer sites such as Zalora, Bobobobo and Sports Direct across Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia.
All data used in this report comes from products retailing online as tracked by Omnilytics, unless otherwise mentioned.
The international activewear brands in the region have launched successful marketing activities, limited edition capsules and localised assortments that convert to sell-outs.
Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia saw a combined increased in sell-out of 32% in the last 6 months from April to September 2020 against the previous 6 months (October 2019 to March 2020), on the back of marginal newness (Chart 1).
While Adidas and Nike remain the region’s most popular brands, the last 6 months observed the biggest online sell-out growth by Under Armour (+79%), Puma (+53%) and in third place, Adidas (+26%). The top performing categories were Shorts, Accessories and Sports Bras, which differed from sweatpants and hoodies that are trending in the western markets.
The brands traded with a combined 47% and 43% sell-out rates in Malaysia and Singapore respectively, amidst growing competition from the local brands.
Indonesia recorded the least growth in the region, given the uncertainty surrounding the second partial lockdown, which commenced in September.
The subsequent pages will focus on the five opportunities of growth in the region, where apparel brands of other segments can also leverage and adapt as relevant.
While workout bottoms have generally experienced a boom globally, men’s Shorts in the Southeast Asian region drove 50% sell-out in the last 6 months, a 44% increment year-on-year and tailed closely behind Tops. Its huge increase in replenished SKUs at 97% versus the previous period, led to strong full price sell-out contribution at 52% and 16% higher median price.
Bestsellers were dominated by running shorts, but more interestingly, the demand came from higher price points.
Nike and Under Armour were the go-to brands for 2-in-1 and performance shorts in the USD 50 – 70 price range (Chart 2). On the flip side, Puma failed to drive any sell-out in the same price range.
New Balance’s popular essential shorts along with Adidas’ graphic shorts were driving strong sell-out in the good tier, USD 30 – 40 price range.
Overall, the best-selling products were largely dominated by Nike, Adidas and Under Armour.
While majority of these SKUs were best for running, the lifestyle and training shorts by Adidas were also preferred by consumers.