The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

China’s week-long holiday spending slows

Chinese visitors spent US$149bil, the slowest growth since 2011

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BEIJING: The downward pressure on China’s consumptio­n persisted over the Lunar New Year holiday, the annual festival when people travel, shop, and give gifts or money.

People in China spent 1.01 trillion yuan (US$149bil) at restaurant­s, shopping malls and online outlets over the the week-long holiday, according to the Ministry of Commerce. That was 8.5% higher than during last year’s festive period, but the slowest increase since at least 2011.

Increasing­ly frugal Chinese consumers are sending chills through global investors, with the pullback in spending hitting the profits of companies such as Apple Inc, Swatch Group AG and luxury car makers. Weaker growth, the trade war with the US, and a crackdown on debt all undercut momentum in 2018, sending auto purchases into contractio­n for the first time in almost three decades and retail sales growth to the slowest pace since 2002.

“We believe household consumptio­n will likely be sluggish,” wrote Lu Ting, chief China economist at Nomura Holding Inc, citing the quick buildup of household debt, lackluster income growth outlook amid the economic slowdown and the cooling property sector. “We expect the government to rely more on infrastruc­ture investment to stabilise economic growth, but it may take time for infrastruc­ture investment projects to start.”

Spending at tourist venues rose 8.2% to 513.9 billion yuan, the state broadcaste­r CCTV reported, citing data from the Ministry of Commerce, slower than the 12.6% rise last year. Domestic box office revenue was 1% higher than in 2018, according to a report in The Paper, which cited statistics from a cinema ticketing service platform of Alibaba Pictures.

Those who are still shopping are increasing­ly doing it online, with JD.com reporting a 43% jump in sales around the holiday versus a year earlier. Cellphones, computers and home appliances were at the top of shopping lists, and there was a surge in purchases of kitchenwar­e and furniture, according to a report from the second largest e-commerce site in the nation.

Spending growth in smaller cities jumped 55% on Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s Tmall, faster than in major metropolis­es, where residents are being squeezed by higher housing prices. Tourists chose Hong Kong, Thailand and Macau as their top overseas destinatio­ns, according to Alibaba’s online tourism site. The US was the seventh most popular spot, even amid the trade tensions.

China mainland visitors to Macau reached almost 900,000 during the week-long Chinese New Year holiday, climbing 26% from last year’s festive holiday, according to Macau’s tourism office. That was more than double last year’s growth.

The week-long Lunar New Year falls on different dates in January or February each year. During the holiday, hundreds of millions travel to their hometowns or go overseas, visit relatives and dine out. This year’s holiday was Feb 4-Feb 10, while it was Feb 15-Feb 21 in 2018.

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