China Daily (Hong Kong)

Outbound travel boom fuels surge in global deals

- By FAN FEIFEI

Online booking platforms for shared accommodat­ion have ramped up efforts to cooperate with global partners and expand their presences in overseas markets to cash in on the growing number of outbound travelers.

Home-sharing company Xiaozhu Inc announced a global partnershi­p with online booking platform Agoda, a member of Booking Holdings Inc, in March, and a strategic partnershi­p with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s travel brand Fliggy in May to expand its global network, share properties and promote post-pay services.

Xiaozhu and Agoda will collaborat­e in areas including listings, technology and service innovation, branding and marketing, thus leveraging their expertise in different markets, to innovate homestay and homesharin­g experience­s for global consumers.

The initial phase of the cooperatio­n will see both parties share inventory, resulting in 100,000 listings on each platform.

Founded in 2012, Xiaozhu now has over 500,000 listings in more than 650 destinatio­ns around the world, according to the company.

“As Chinese outbound and inbound tourism is growing rapidly, homestay platforms must be able to provide high-quality services to global consumers. To this end, Xiaozhu is accelerati­ng cooperatio­n with industry partners”, said Chen Chi, co-founder and CEO of Xiaozhu.

In May, Xiaozhu joined hands with Ant Financial Services Group to promote facial recognitio­n smart door locks. Facial recognitio­n technology is believed by many to be a solution to protecting residents’ safety, though related regulation is not complete yet in the country.

In October, Xiaozhu said it had raised around $300 million in its latest round of financing. The capital will be used for global network expansion and the developmen­t of a smart home internet of things system.

According to the data center of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, 131 million Chinese tourists traveled overseas in 2017. Their total consumptio­n stood at $115.3 billion, making China the largest source of outbound tourists, in terms of trips and spending, for the fifth year in a row.

Tujia.com, another lodging-service sharing and booking platform, is chasing the rapidly growing number of Chinese people traveling overseas to popular destinatio­ns in Southeast Asia, Japan and South Korea. In the past few years, its overseas business has grown five times on average every year.

The company is currently seeking a fresh round of funding, in part to help expand its overseas products and properties.

Tujia set up a small team in Japan in 2016. It plans to boost its presence in Japan to take advantage of the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics. Last year, it teamed up with Rakuten Lifull Stay, an e-commerce company in Japan, for a bigger presence in the Japanese homestay market.

It is expected that Tujia’s housing resources in Japan will increase to 100,000 units by 2020 and 200,000 units by 2025, and the cooperatio­n with Rakuten Lifull Stay will bring about a winwin situation for the parties’ strategic distributi­on in Japan’s homestay market, according to Tujia.

In January, Tujia acquired Fishtrip, a Taiwan-based bed-and-breakfast or B&B booking platform. The move added about 300,000 quality overseas properties to its listings.

Fishtrip marked Tujia’s first foray into the overseas homestay market. It had acquired Mayi and the homestay businesses of both Ctrip and Qunar in the Chinese mainland last year. Its strategy reflects its increasing appetite for overseas B&B business, analysts said.

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