Luxury brands are seeing a surge in sales in Japan, largely driven by purchases from Chinese travelers taking advantage of a weak yen, according to earnings results this month. LVMH, Kering and Burberry all noted the uptick, despite weaker sales in China that weighed on overall results. About half of Chinese luxury spending took place abroad prior to the pandemic, but that has now halved to about 20% to 25%, according to Oliver Wyman.

SHANGHAI — Luxury brands are seeing a surge in sales in Japan, largely driven by purchases from Chinese travelers taking advantage of a weak yen, according to earnings results this month. LVMH , Kering and Burberry all noted the uptick, despite weaker sales in China that weighed on overall results. Japan sales for Kering-owned Yves Saint Laurent surged by 42% in the first half of the year "due to strong growth in the number of tourists visiting from China and Southeast Asia, who were attracted by the pricing differential arising from the favorable exchange rate," the parent company said Wednesday of its second-largest brand.

For the first half of the year, luxury group LVMH this week reported " exceptional growth in Japan arising in particular from purchases made by Chinese travelers." The Chinese yuan has gained 6.9% against the yen so far this year after this month hitting its strongest level against the Japanese currency in at least 24 years, according to Wind Information data going back to 2000.

The yen has fallen to 38-year lows against t.