China's POP MART Targets $4 Billion In Sales This Year
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Pop Mart’s Labubu toys are fueling a 240 percent stock surge and making CEO Wang Ning one of China’s youngest billionaires.
Dupes of the internet-viral Labubu dolls are being sold around the world. Chinese authorities are now seizing them by the thousands in a counterfeit crackdown.
Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry hilariously was gifted a "Labubu" while in China for his Curry camp on Sunday.
It's 2025, and Labubus seem omnipresent. For those living under a rock, Labubus are little plush toys of bunny/elf monsters with disturbingly sharp teeth,
Labubus dolls are only available through online purchases and in-store pickups, if you can find one in stock. Adding to the scarcity factor is the blind-box packaging.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has issued an urgent warning about fake Labubu dolls for posing a serious choking risk to young children.
First created in 2015 by the Hong Kong artist Kasing Lung, Labubus are fuzzy elf toys from the Chinese brand Pop Mart with keychain rings attached. After K-pop superstar Lisa started wearing them on her designer handbags in 2024, the toys became baubles displayed like precious gems on purses and backpacks worldwide.
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Front Office Sports on MSN‘Labubu Gang’: The Creepy-Cute Dolls Sweeping Pro Sports
The creepy-cute doll is the hottest collectible—and fashion statement. The post ‘Labubu Gang’: The Creepy-Cute Dolls Sweeping Pro Sports appeared first on Front Office Sports.