For decades Hong Kong has considered itself one of the world's top shopping destinations, a place where bargains can be found and the variety of goods available is unequaled anywhere in the world.
But times seem to be changing - and fast. Spiraling rents and the rising influence of mainland Chinese tourists - a group that now accounts for more than 60 percent of annual visitors to town - appear to be narrowing the choices found in Hong Kong and forcing some of the city's more traditional retail outlets out of business.
In the 1970s, the retail landscape in Hong Kong was dominated by massive Chinese emporiums, selling everything from cheap clothes to cheap antiques and souvenirs. But their numbers have plummeted from an estimated 300 to just eight - and even those remaining have had to "re-brand" themselves by packing their shelves with such items as Chinese medicines and herbs.
Of course, Chinese tourists can get these kinds of goods in the cities they live and even if they might cost a little more back home, that's not exactly what they come to Hong Kong for anyway.
Hong Kong welcomed 22.7 million Chinese tourists last year - out of a total of 36 million over 12 months - which was a massive rise from the 7.5 million who came in 2003. And the main focus of their visits is shopping, but of the distinctly luxurious kind.
Chinese visitors to Hong Kong spend more than any other group - on average around HK$12,000 (1,100 euros) each every time they come here.
And so mass retailers are fast disappearing from the city's main shopping districts of Tsim Sha Tsui, Causeway Bay and Central and are being replaced by jewelry and watch shops.
"The change is being driven by the expensive tastes of mainlanders," one property agent told the South China Morning Post newspaper here.
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