POP MART (HK:09992) has released its 2025 results, reporting revenue of 37.1 billion yuan, a staggering year-on-year increase of 184.7%. Net profit reached 12.7 billion yuan, surging 308.8%. Gross margin stood at 72.1%, with a net profit margin of 35.1%. A company that started with palm-sized plush toys has seen its revenue soar from 6.3 billion to 37.1 billion in three years, nearly a sixfold increase. Subsequently, in the recently disclosed unaudited business update for the first quarter of 2026, the company announced that overall revenue for the period grew by 75% to 80% compared to the same period in 2025.
Firstly, POP MART has established a rare triangular model in the consumer goods industry characterized by "high profitability, zero debt, and strong efficiency." A gross margin of 72.1% and a net profit margin of 35.1% mean the company earns 35 yuan in net profit for every 100 yuan in sales, a level of profit quality that is top-tier in the consumer goods sector. More remarkably, the company has zero interest-bearing debt, with an asset-liability ratio of only 29.4%. The sales expense ratio decreased from 28% to 21.8%, and the administrative expense ratio dropped from 7.3% to 4.8%. From an industrial organization theory perspective, this indicates that POP MART has moved past the initial stage of burning cash for scale and has entered a mature growth phase driven by brand premium and enhanced operational efficiency. A consumer goods company that can achieve high-speed growth without borrowing or burning cash is itself a scarce industrial capability in the current economic environment.
Secondly, POP MART is making the critical leap from a "Chinese trendy toy" brand to a "global cultural consumer goods" company. In 2025, the proportion of overseas revenue jumped from 32% to 44%, with revenue from the Americas region skyrocketing by 750%. The company added a net 109 stores globally. In the context of international industrial division of labor, past Chinese consumer goods exports relied on cost-effectiveness and OEM capabilities, whereas POP MART's success stems from original IP and cultural export. The Labubu character, featured by Lisa (of BLACKPINK), sparked viral spread on European and American social media, with a plush toy breaking the invisible ceiling that often limits the reach of Asian cultural consumer goods. This reflects a broader trend of Chinese consumer brands upgrading from "product export" to "cultural export," moving beyond merely selling goods to exporting aesthetics, emotions, and lifestyles. The industrial value of this transition is far more profound than the revenue figures themselves.
Thirdly, POP MART's expansion of its product matrix and its theme park development are building an industrial moat. Revenue from the plush category exploded from 2.8 billion to 18.7 billion yuan within a year, accounting for over 50% of total revenue. This demonstrates that POP MART no longer relies solely on the figurine category but has formed a multi-wheel-driven product ecosystem encompassing figurines, plush toys, and derivatives. The progress in theme park business is particularly noteworthy, marking a shift from "selling products" to "selling a lifestyle," a path that aligns with the Disney model. Management has proactively defined 2026 as a year for "pulling into the pit stop for refueling and changing tires," intentionally slowing down to accumulate strength. This strategic discipline itself indicates the company has developed the rhythm of a mature industry player. With ample cash reserves, the financial confidence of zero interest-bearing debt, clear-sighted management, and genuine validation in the global market, a palm-sized plush toy can indeed support a multi-billion-yuan global business. This report card deserves serious consideration.
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