(Bloomberg) — China’s recent Dragon Boat Festival holiday showed that the nation’s increasing number of domestic tourists still aren’t spending at pre-Covid levels, underscoring the challenge President Xi Jinping’s government confronts in boosting economic momentum.
Domestic tourist spending rose to 40.4 billion yuan ($5.6 billion) during the three-day holiday that ended Monday, up 8.1% from the same festival a year ago, according to a statement Monday from the tourism ministry. Overall, domestic traffic rose 6.3% from last year to 110 million trips, the ministry reported.
Despite those increases, the average spending per traveler was 12.3% below 2019 levels, according to an analysis by Citigroup Inc. analysts Brian Gong and Alicia Yap.
The increasing number of trips but muted spending reflects “more cautious spending and demand diverted to lower-tier cities or value/discount packages,” according to the Citi report, which characterized travel demand as “a bit weak.”
The per capita spending, according to Citi, extends a moderating trend from April’s Qingming Festival. The weakening momentum highlights the fragility of the consumption rebound in China, where economic challenges from a lingering property crisis to a sluggish job market are combining with changing travel preferences of Chinese residents.
Shares Fall
“Low costs, domestic travel and self-driving were the main highlights of spending during the holiday, underscoring the preference for saving costs,” said Xing Zhaopeng, an analyst at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group. Data from online booking platforms Trip.com and Tongcheng Travel also suggest nearby travel was still the key choice for the short holiday.
Tourism stocks in China fell on Tuesday after the disappointing data. Emei Shan Tourism Co. and BTG Hotels Group Co. both slid by as much as 3.4%. In Hong Kong, Tongcheng Travel Holdings fell by as much as 2.6%, the most in nearly two weeks.
In a sign of how Beijing has been limiting some information on economic issues, the latest tourism report did not compare the fresh data with 2019 figures, unlike for previous holidays.
Travel spending could still turn around with the traditional summer break, according to the Citi report. That could serve as a better litmus test of consumer sentiment.
Beijing is taking some steps to stoke more consumer spending, including a trade-in program for new appliances. The government also unveiled its most forceful attempt yet to rescue the spiraling property market. Economists remain largely confident that the country will achieve its 5% economic growth target this year.
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