Visitor arrivals from China are reshaping the
Phuket tourism market with one in four international visitors now
coming from the mainland.
According to new data released by
Phuket-based consulting firm C9 Hotelworks, in the first half of
2013 the resort island attracted nearly half a million Chinese
travelers.
Turn back the calendar to as recently as 2007 and the
number was just under 40,000, with airlift is a key catalyst with
surging numbers of direct flights between Phuket and mainland
cities, which now stands at 22 versus only seven just five years
ago.
As Thailand's booming travel sector witnessed
12.7 million overseas arrivals for the period January through
June, China alone excluding the SAR has claimed 18% of the total
market.
"For the first time travelers from legacy markets such as
Western Europe no longer present in the top 5 arrivals. What has
replaced them are Asian regional travelers and the emerging
Russian segment," said C9's Managing Director, Bill Barnett. "We are forecasting a record high three
million international visitors for the full year 2013 with the duo
of China and Russia boosting 44% of the total overseas volume at
the end of June. The mantra of demand is clearly Thailand's
strategic location in the sweet spot "window" of six hours and
under airline travel time."
One
by-product of the Asian economic influence noted by C9 is a series
of new hotel branded real estate projects which have tapped into
the Thai domestic and regional buying pool. Properties that in the
past attracted end users are now focusing on investment buyers.
Though a sign of the times is unit downsizing and lower price
points, which in the branded condominium/apartment segment
averages just over US$4,300 per square meter.
"While there have been concerns voiced by the local
travel industry over low-end mass tourism, hotel trading figures
remain strong. C9's report shows that mid-year Phuket market wide
occupancy stood at 76%, which is the highest level since 2008.
More importantly average rates year-on-year rose by 7% for the
same period," added Mr Barnett. "We looked inside the
numbers and spoke to hoteliers regarding the trend of Eastern
European tourists upgrading room categories or using higher rated
hotels, which is on the way up. This is apparent in the
performance of the upscale tier and beach specific west coast
locations where room rates have ticked higher."
C9 otelworks,
Phuket
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