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Pop by virtual summits with drink in hand: signs of good cheer in the tattered travel trade

by The Editor
June 28, 2020
in Life Style
0
Pop by virtual summits with drink in hand: signs of good cheer in the tattered travel trade

SINGAPORE – During a virtual travel summit last Wednesday, those logging in from Singapore like me sipped hand-delivered cocktails at home while journeying around the world in six hours.

The Web In Travel (Wit) event was a pandemic-forged experiment that united a thousand travel professionals near and far, including Hong Kong, Riyadh and Seattle.

The live event, a semblance of its physical versions before Covid-19, involved interviews with travel players such as Accor, Expedia and Klook.

From different cities, "letters" or spoken reflections by leading minds about the altered state of travel alluded to the air of sadness and also the joy of discovery that will not be erased from psyches. Guests included Singapore Tourism Board chief executive Keith Tan.

Staged by Wit, a platform for online travel based here, the sparkling summit ended with a fun debate and then a dance party with DJ Aldrin.

A similar live-streamed summit by the Pacific Asia Travel Association (Pata) also took off last week. Like Wit, this was a free, first-time venture.

With a mobile app, I could wander through its Dream To Travel festival (June 22 to July 17) that is hosting virtual tours, panels, networking clusters, movies and games from the Bangkok base.

Travel is now rebooting incrementally, and these online festivals are one indication.

At the same time, planes are flying domestic routes, hotels are seeing occupancy of 40 per cent in some markets and Trip.com is reporting sales of US$70 million (S$97.3 million) from its live-streamed promotions that were piloted mainly in China.

But, hold the champagne. The pandemic is still playing out.

While there are reopenings, pivots and signs of ebullience, there are also fresh outbreaks of Covid-19, job losses across tourism and global economic pain.

So we will have a long-drawn, layered narrative of both green shoots of growth and buried plans as world tourism zig-zags towards recovery.

This mixed story is the case, whether one is scrutinising entire sectors like aviation or drills down to the company level.

Take Klook, the popular Hong Kong-based travel activities and services booking platform that has a Singapore office. The unicorn has retrenched and furloughed staff to cut costs.

Klook's virtual tour of Barcelona's Casa Batllo. ST PHOTO: LEE SIEW HUA

But in an agile move, it also launched Klook Home within a month, creating virtual experiences and home-based learning for a shut-in world.

There are DIY kits to make masks or bubble tea, for instance, and virtual tours of Barcelona's Casa Batllo designed by surrealist architect Antoni Gaudi, or Bali Safari and Marine Park, where baby Komodo dragons loll.

Such tours from Klook and other vendors, immersive up to a point, have been quick tickets to elsewhere for me.

Similarly, the picture is mixed to murky for airlines that can still rely on domestic tourism, like Qantas.

"Travel within Australia is showing careful signs of recovery," its chief executive Alan Joyce said last week. The group expects to break even this financial year ending September.

The bigger story is that it is fighting for survival, however.

It is cutting 6,000 jobs from a 29,000-strong workforce. Another 15,000 will be on furlough till flights pick up.

The carrier will also ground 100 aircraft for up to a year.

Qantas, which turns a joyless 100 this year, is taking the realistic view that there will not be international operations of real scale until July next year.

Revenue, Mr Joyce cautioned, will be much lower for several years so "this means becoming a much smaller airline in the short term".

The mixed signals continue unabated. Cirium, a travel industry data and analytics company, expects recovery in Asia-Pacific aviation from now on.

Citing global flight schedule data, Ms Joanna Lu, its head of consultancy for Asia, said last Tuesday: "Those with large domestic markets are expected to see capacity back to pre-Covid-19 levels or even growth by July."

She noted: "The global market reached rock bottom in April this year and the only way now is up."

The reality is that recovery is beginning from an abysmal baseline, when the skies emptied out.

April traffic for hard-hit Hong Kong was down by more than 73 per cent compared with the same period in 2019, for instance.

Likewise, a snapshot of the hotel scene fuses hope and anxiety. Even as staff are laid off around the world, news releases of hotel reopenings are landing with greater frequency in my inbox.

"Aman reawakens across Europe," I read about the luxury hotel group.

Hotel occupancy rates are now hovering around 40 per cent in domestic-driven markets like the United States and China, I learn at webinars.

In Hyatt's case, its hotels in China are now running at or better than 50 per cent occupancy, up from single-digits in mid-February.

During the Labour Day holiday last month, some hotels achieved 90 per cent occupancy.

In Hong Kong, staycations have boosted occupancy within the range of 35 to 85 per cent on weekends. In Thailand, its Hyatt Regency Hua Hin sees more than 86 per cent occupancy on weekends.

Mr David Udell, president (Asia Pacific) of Hyatt Hotels Corporation, said: "Recovery and reopening our hoteRead More – Source

straitstimes

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SINGAPORE – During a virtual travel summit last Wednesday, those logging in from Singapore like me sipped hand-delivered cocktails at home while journeying around the world in six hours.

The Web In Travel (Wit) event was a pandemic-forged experiment that united a thousand travel professionals near and far, including Hong Kong, Riyadh and Seattle.

The live event, a semblance of its physical versions before Covid-19, involved interviews with travel players such as Accor, Expedia and Klook.

From different cities, "letters" or spoken reflections by leading minds about the altered state of travel alluded to the air of sadness and also the joy of discovery that will not be erased from psyches. Guests included Singapore Tourism Board chief executive Keith Tan.

Staged by Wit, a platform for online travel based here, the sparkling summit ended with a fun debate and then a dance party with DJ Aldrin.

A similar live-streamed summit by the Pacific Asia Travel Association (Pata) also took off last week. Like Wit, this was a free, first-time venture.

With a mobile app, I could wander through its Dream To Travel festival (June 22 to July 17) that is hosting virtual tours, panels, networking clusters, movies and games from the Bangkok base.

Travel is now rebooting incrementally, and these online festivals are one indication.

At the same time, planes are flying domestic routes, hotels are seeing occupancy of 40 per cent in some markets and Trip.com is reporting sales of US$70 million (S$97.3 million) from its live-streamed promotions that were piloted mainly in China.

But, hold the champagne. The pandemic is still playing out.

While there are reopenings, pivots and signs of ebullience, there are also fresh outbreaks of Covid-19, job losses across tourism and global economic pain.

So we will have a long-drawn, layered narrative of both green shoots of growth and buried plans as world tourism zig-zags towards recovery.

This mixed story is the case, whether one is scrutinising entire sectors like aviation or drills down to the company level.

Take Klook, the popular Hong Kong-based travel activities and services booking platform that has a Singapore office. The unicorn has retrenched and furloughed staff to cut costs.

Klook's virtual tour of Barcelona's Casa Batllo. ST PHOTO: LEE SIEW HUA

But in an agile move, it also launched Klook Home within a month, creating virtual experiences and home-based learning for a shut-in world.

There are DIY kits to make masks or bubble tea, for instance, and virtual tours of Barcelona's Casa Batllo designed by surrealist architect Antoni Gaudi, or Bali Safari and Marine Park, where baby Komodo dragons loll.

Such tours from Klook and other vendors, immersive up to a point, have been quick tickets to elsewhere for me.

Similarly, the picture is mixed to murky for airlines that can still rely on domestic tourism, like Qantas.

"Travel within Australia is showing careful signs of recovery," its chief executive Alan Joyce said last week. The group expects to break even this financial year ending September.

The bigger story is that it is fighting for survival, however.

It is cutting 6,000 jobs from a 29,000-strong workforce. Another 15,000 will be on furlough till flights pick up.

The carrier will also ground 100 aircraft for up to a year.

Qantas, which turns a joyless 100 this year, is taking the realistic view that there will not be international operations of real scale until July next year.

Revenue, Mr Joyce cautioned, will be much lower for several years so "this means becoming a much smaller airline in the short term".

The mixed signals continue unabated. Cirium, a travel industry data and analytics company, expects recovery in Asia-Pacific aviation from now on.

Citing global flight schedule data, Ms Joanna Lu, its head of consultancy for Asia, said last Tuesday: "Those with large domestic markets are expected to see capacity back to pre-Covid-19 levels or even growth by July."

She noted: "The global market reached rock bottom in April this year and the only way now is up."

The reality is that recovery is beginning from an abysmal baseline, when the skies emptied out.

April traffic for hard-hit Hong Kong was down by more than 73 per cent compared with the same period in 2019, for instance.

Likewise, a snapshot of the hotel scene fuses hope and anxiety. Even as staff are laid off around the world, news releases of hotel reopenings are landing with greater frequency in my inbox.

"Aman reawakens across Europe," I read about the luxury hotel group.

Hotel occupancy rates are now hovering around 40 per cent in domestic-driven markets like the United States and China, I learn at webinars.

In Hyatt's case, its hotels in China are now running at or better than 50 per cent occupancy, up from single-digits in mid-February.

During the Labour Day holiday last month, some hotels achieved 90 per cent occupancy.

In Hong Kong, staycations have boosted occupancy within the range of 35 to 85 per cent on weekends. In Thailand, its Hyatt Regency Hua Hin sees more than 86 per cent occupancy on weekends.

Mr David Udell, president (Asia Pacific) of Hyatt Hotels Corporation, said: "Recovery and reopening our hoteRead More – Source

straitstimes

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