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People pose for photos with figures in the liking of dragons nearby the Guiyuan Temple on February 14 2024 in Wuhan, Hubei province, China. China is marking the Spring Festival which begins with the Lunar New Year on February 10, ushering in the Year of the dragon. Pictures: Photo by Getty Images
People pose for photos with figures in the liking of dragons nearby the Guiyuan Temple on February 14 2024 in Wuhan, Hubei province, China. China is marking the Spring Festival which begins with the Lunar New Year on February 10, ushering in the Year of the dragon. Pictures: Photo by Getty Images

Beijing/Hong Kong — Chinese travellers flocked to tourist hotspots across Asia over the lunar new year break, with visitor numbers and spending in destinations including Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia exceeding pre-Covid-19 levels.

Visa-free access for Chinese tourists to the Southeast Asian countries boosted traffic and signalled a robust revival in travel since Beijing lifted strict Covid-19 restrictions in early 2023, which had all but shut China’s borders for three years.

The increase also provides a welcome relief to countries whose tourism industries rely on the Chinese and their spending for growth, although the outlook for a sustained recovery in overseas travel is overshadowed by a sluggish mainland economy and volatile financial markets that have seen consumers tighten their belts at home.

“Despite the macroeconomic headwinds, we believe Chinese citizens are still willing to spend on travel-related experiences … we think travel-related spending could continue to outpace this overall domestic consumption,” HSBC said in a research note.

Bookings to Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia combined jumped more than 30% from February 10-17 compared with 2019, according to travel website operator Trip.com, with Chinese visitors to Hong Kong, Macau, Japan and South Korea also increasing.

The holiday in 2024 lasted for eight days, one day more than the Lunar New year break in 2019.

Travellers walk with their luggage outside the Beijing railway station during the Spring Festival travel rush after the eight-day Lunar New Year holiday, in Beijing, China, February 18, 2024. REUTERS/FLORENCE LO
Travellers walk with their luggage outside the Beijing railway station during the Spring Festival travel rush after the eight-day Lunar New Year holiday, in Beijing, China, February 18, 2024. REUTERS/FLORENCE LO

Reflecting the boost from visa waivers, hotel bookings for Bangkok tripled over the period from February 10-13 year-on-year, while those for Singapore jumped nine-fold, according to travel platform LY.com.

Spending in Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia combined on the Chinese mobile payment platform Alipay increased 7.5% in the period from February 9-12 from 2019 levels and nearly 7-fold from 2023, Alipay said.

However, overall consumer spending only recovered to 82% of levels in 2020, the company said.

Middle East surge

As Chinese scour for new adventures, the Middle East proved a popular Lunar New Year destination, with travel to Saudi Arabia up more than nine-fold from 2019 levels and bookings to the UAE climbing 60%, Trip.com said.

The gambling hub of Macau, the only place in China where citizens can legally gamble in casinos, recorded a surge in Chinese tourists with more than 1-million visiting over the holiday and average hotel occupancy rates reaching 95%, according to official data.

The jump in tourists bodes well for some of the world’s largest casino operators in the former Portuguese territory, including Sands China and Wynn Macau.

JPMorgan said in a note it expected daily gross gaming revenues for the peak of the holiday to hit $124m for the first time since 2020 — higher than the $112m generated during the October 2023 Golden Week holiday.

Mass gaming rates were forecast to have reached 120% of pre-Covid-19 levels, it said, adding that it expects February gross gaming revenues to rise by at least 80% year-on-year to $2.36bn, the highest since 2020.

Across the border in Hong Kong, leader John Lee said on February 20 that more than 1.2-million Chinese tourists visited the city over Lunar New Year and overall hotel occupancy rates reached 90% in the first few days. About 1,980 group tours from mainland China visited Hong Kong during the holiday.

South Korea’s justice ministry said more than 114,000 Chinese visitors entered the country during the holiday, up 4% from 2019, while some travel agents noted tourists were increasingly opting to travel on their own, rather than in groups, which meant fewer organised trips to mega-stores.

“With drops in the number of group tourists, we don’t get to see Chinese tourists carrying big shopping bags anymore,” an official at a travel agency in Seoul said, requesting not to be named as he is not authorised to speak to media.

In Japan, department store operator Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings said that through to February 14 “duty-free sales were significantly higher than the previous year, partly due to the Chinese New Year”.

A shift in holiday tastes was reflected in some data as travellers sought more experience-based trips, with Alipay reporting Chinese tourists globally spent 70% more on food and beverages compared with pre-Covid-19 levels.

Trip.com said overseas car rentals on its platform jumped 53% compared to 2019 and tickets for scenic experiences abroad soared more than 130%.

Reuters

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