China holiday spending gain a blip for markets worried by growth

    • Total spending by domestic tourists during the three-day Mid-Autumn festival rose 8 per cent from 2019 to 51 billion yuan (S$9.3 billion).
    • Total spending by domestic tourists during the three-day Mid-Autumn festival rose 8 per cent from 2019 to 51 billion yuan (S$9.3 billion). PHOTO: EPA-EFE
    Published Wed, Sep 18, 2024 · 05:42 PM

    CHINESE consumption edged up slightly during a major holiday this week from its pre-pandemic level, a rebound that did not sway investors still fixated on the extent of the country’s deepening economic woes.

    Total spending by domestic tourists during the three-day Mid-Autumn festival rose 8 per cent from 2019 to 51 billion yuan (S$9.3 billion), the Ministry of Culture and Tourism said on Wednesday (Sep 18). The number of trips increased 6.3 per cent to 107 million, according to its statement.

    When measured per trip, spending amounted to just 477 yuan, up 1.6 per cent from five years ago, according to Bloomberg calculations based on the ministry’s data.

    The fragility of the consumer economy is playing out in the equities market. Chinese travel and shopping-related shares fell on Wednesday, with tour operator Yunnan Tourism dropping by the most in over a month.

    Restraint by consumers during a major holiday is a measure of the challenges facing an economy beset by worsening unemployment and a property slump that has ravaged household wealth.

    The meagre per-trip increase “doesn’t point to a recovery in consumption”, according to Zhaopeng Xing, a senior strategist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, who expects a drop in daily spending during the upcoming Golden Week compared with September’s break.

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    “The spending figures have been extremely volatile over the past five years with wealth effects due to drops in property and stock prices disrupting the normal pace of consumption,” he noted.

    Pessimism is spreading among economists that China will struggle to meet its around 5 per cent target for economic expansion this year as domestic demand stays stubbornly subdued. Retail sales gained just 3.4 per cent on year in the first eight months of 2024, less than half the growth seen in the same period in 2023, official data showed.

    The average number of cross-region trips each day during the break that ended on Tuesday notched an estimated increase of 28 per cent on year, state broadcaster China Central Television reported, citing the Ministry of Transport. The figures were probably skewed at least in part by widespread flight cancellations after the strongest typhoon in more than seven decades struck Shanghai and some other cities.

    Box-office revenue in the three days reached 389 million yuan, compared with 367 million yuan in 2023, the Xinhua News Agency reported, citing data released by the China Film Administration.

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