As President Xi Jinping and his spouse tour Africa, China’s style world is scrutinizing Peng Liyuan's wardrobe - and Chinese language stock markets are conserving a close eye, too.
if you wish to make a killing on the stock market, here’s an unusual tip: Identify the style home behind the garments that Chinese first woman Peng Liyuan is carrying at her next public appearance and buy shares in that firm, fast.
Ms. Peng, currently touring Africa with her husband, the new Chinese
President Xi Jinping, is proving a smash hit back home and inspiring
fashionistas to replicate her look.
So when a news story on
Tuesday identified the pearl earrings that Peng was wearing as coming
from the city of Zhuji, the stock price of all the pearl producers in
Zhuji rose on the news. One company’s stock rose so far so fast that
market regulators capped its price rise on Wednesday.
Peng has captured the Chinese imagination as a stylish and modern
face for her country, most of whose first ladies have ranged recently
from dowdy to invisible. And the state-controlled press is playing the
story for all it is worth, with front page photos and breathless
coverage.
“Peng Liyuan Opens the Door for Chinese Fashion and
Confidence” read the enthusiastic headline of an editorial in
Wednesday’s edition of Global Times, a tabloid published by the ruling
Communist Party.
In a world where China is more often seen as a
threatening potential enemy than as a friend, according to a number of
recent international opinion polls, Peng is a more useful weapon for
Beijing’s image-makers than an aircraft carrier.
She was already
massively popular before her husband became president earlier this
month; indeed, as a nationally famous singer of patriotic and military
songs, she was better known than Mr. Xi until he was tapped five years
as next in line for the top job. And then she dropped out of sight.
Recently
she has quietly begun doing first lady-like things, such as becoming a
World Health Organization ambassador in the fight against HIV-Aids. She
is “widely viewed as a tremendous element of China’s soft power,” wrote
leading foreign policy pundit Shen Dingli in an opinion piece for the
“Global Times” earlier this week. “Now … it is time to present such soft
power on the world stage.”
Peng has not opened her mouth in
public yet, but has used her fashion sense to project China’s soft
power. Everything she wears is Chinese made and designed, and sometimes
clearly designed in the oriental style. That is a marked contrast with
the sense of style that prevails among most wealthy Chinese women, which
tends towards well known Western brands.
Such brands are bad news
in China at the moment, too closely identified with corrupt officials
and their wives at a time when Xi has promised a crackdown on
corruption.