News

Pop Mart’s Labubu toys are fueling a 240 percent stock surge and making CEO Wang Ning one of China’s youngest billionaires.
CPSC says fake Labubus, imported to the U.S. from China and sold both as plush figures and plush keychains, are small enough to fit into a young child's mouth and block their airway. They've also ...
Shares of Pop Mart International Group Ltd. surged more than 12% in Hong Kong on Wednesday, after the Chinese toymaker ...
Labubu hype led to Pop Mart’s record-breaking first-half revenue of $1.93 billion—surpassing the Beijing-based retailer’s ...
Pop Mart's net profit soared nearly 400 per cent in the first half of 2025. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at ...
The Consumer Product Safety Commission is issuing a safety warning for collectors of the viral Labubu dolls. The CPSC announced that fake Labubu dolls are being sold as plush figures and keychains, ...
Hong Kong stocks on Wednesday reversed course to snap a four-day losing streak, spurred by comments from China's foreign ministry that traders interpreted as a sign of potential progress in the ...
The stock climbed as much as 14% to HK$319.4, the highest level since the company went public in December 2020.
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, ...
Pop Mart has posted revenue of RMB13.88 billion (US$1.93 billion) for the first half of this year, up 204 per cent year on ...
The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is warning shoppers that fake Labubu dolls could pose a serious safety concern.
Wang, who founded the company in 2010, was speaking with analysts after Pop Mart announced record half-year results on ...