--- title: "Pop Mart’s $33 Billion Rout Casts Doubt on Life After Labubu" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/281434908.md" description: "Pop Mart International Group Ltd. is facing a significant selloff, with shares dropping over 30% recently, leading to a nearly 60% decline from its August peak and a loss of $33 billion in market cap. Analysts express concerns about the company's reliance on its Labubu dolls for growth, with weakening sales and high inventory levels. Despite stock buybacks, investor confidence remains low, and the company must prove it can sustain its IP popularity and introduce new successful characters to regain market trust. Short selling has increased, indicating ongoing skepticism about future performance." datetime: "2026-04-01T23:31:09.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281434908.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281434908.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281434908.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281434908.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281434908.md) # Pop Mart’s $33 Billion Rout Casts Doubt on Life After Labubu A relentless selloff in Pop Mart International Group Ltd. shares is showing little sign of bottoming out as skepticism deepens over the toymaker’s Labubu-led growth. The stock plunged more than 30% over five sessions through Tuesday after the company’s showed a rising dependence on the snaggle-toothed monster dolls. That extended a drop from its record high in August to nearly 60%, wiping out about $33 billion from its market cap. Pop Mart’s latest earnings tipped market sentiment decisively bearish. A wave of price‑target cuts, rising short interest, and a stock slide that persisted despite multiple buybacks signal growing concerns over the company’s ability to replicate Labubu’s success with other products. “We don’t think the market has fully factored in a long downcycle scenario with a much lower margin,” said , a consumer analyst at Deutsche Bank AG, who downgraded the stock to sell after its results. Weakening sales overseas and in China, high inventory and a continuous downward revision on earnings are main pressure points this year, Xu said. The popularity of Labubu dolls exploded globally last year — a rare example of Chinese soft power resonating in Western markets — sending Pop Mart shares soaring about 300% from early 2025 to an all-time high in August. But persistent worries that the Labubu craze could fade has weighed on the stock since. Efforts to diversify its intellectual property have yet to emerge as meaningful growth drivers. The Labubu-led Monsters series accounted for about 40% of total revenue last year, up from 23% in 2024. Meanwhile, other high-profile figures including Crybaby and Molly posted weaker-than-expected sales. Pop Mart’s inventory turnover days has also increased 21% from a year ago to 123 days as of end 2025. The company attributed the rise to longer transportation lead time, higher sales to markets abroad and a wider network of stores. READ: Even cheaper valuations and stock buybacks are not enough to lure investors. Pop Mart has purchased around HK$1.3 billion ($166 million) worth of shares since a record daily drop of 23% on March 25. The stock now trades at a record low level of 10.3 times forward earnings, compared with its three-year average of 24 times. “The current share price isn’t expensive, but that can be said of many Chinese consumer stocks trading at similar valuations,” said , a fund manager at Sparx Group Co. “What has set Pop Mart apart is the narrative, whether it’s Labubu or the next hit IP and their ability to succeed globally, but right now, that story feels uncertain.” To win back investors, Pop Mart needs to demonstrate it can sustain the popularity of its signature IPs from Labubu to Molly, while showcasing its ability to introduce the next blockbuster character, he said. Lee, who started accumulating Pop Mart shares early last year, exited all his positions after the company announced its results. A Pop Mart spokesperson declined to comment. The company has the launch of other emerging characters such as Skullpanda and Twinkle Twinkle, unveiling new collections and crossover series that blend various IPs. At the same time, it’s working on a broader push to extend Labubu’s global appeal from collaborations with Sanrio Co. and FIFA World Cup to a planned animated film in partnership with Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. Pop Mart shares rose 1.2% on Wednesday amid a broad rebound in regional markets. For now, short sellers have added to their positions in the stock with 123 million shares borrowed and sold short, up 16% from before the results, according to S3 Partners data. Options traders also loaded up bearish contracts, pushing put volume on Pop Mart to a high on Wednesday. “The market underestimates the challenges ahead,” said , a consumer analyst at Bernstein, who was for months the lone sell-side bear on the stock. “Signs of slower growth, margin normalization, or IP fatigue could drive meaningful multiple compression and consensus forecasts are likely to be revised downward.” ### Related Stocks - [POP MART (09992.HK)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/09992.HK.md) ## Related News & Research - [Pop Mart Revenue Tops 30 Billion Net Profit Surges 284%, Why Did Stock Price Plummet 15%?](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280420484.md) - [Pop Mart shares sink despite revenue surge, as analysts say Labubu reliance worries investors](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280487493.md) - [Boost for Pop Mart’s shares from buyback likely limited](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280724952.md) - [Jefferies Reaffirms Their Buy Rating on Pop Mart International Group Limited (735)](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280938752.md) - [Labubu maker Pop Mart meets 2025 revenue expectations](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280414763.md)