The Press

Easter, Sheeran boost southern coffers Air NZ, Virgin end alliance Rocket Lab sets launch date

- ANUJA NADKARNI

The Easter break and Ed Sheeran may have given Otago businesses their biggest March spend-up yet, a Dunedin business leader says.

Otago Chamber of Commerce chief executive Dougal McGowan said Sheeran’s concert over the Easter weekend most likely brought in more sales for Dunedin than last year’s British and Irish Lions rugby tour.

‘‘From talking to local business owners it seems sales were better than the Lions tour. It was a huge boost to the city and all local businesses,’’ McGowan said.

About 120,000 fans packed Dunedin for Sheeran’s three Easter concerts, including 65,000 from outside the city, which has a population of 120,000.

Heidi Proctor, owner of Governor’s Cafe on Dunedin’s busy George St, said she mentally prepared her staff for the record weekend beforehand and brought in spare fridges and more cutlery.

‘‘We can seat about 100 people but we had a line out the door for about three hours on Sunday,’’ she said. Despite a 45-minute wait, people stuck around and the business made record sales.

Paymark’s latest monthly electronic spending data showed the most significan­t surge in core retail spending between March 28 and 31 happened in Otago, the West Coast and Marlboroug­h.

Spending increased by $36 million in the regions and decreased by $7.5m in the big cities, as people travelled out of the urban centres for the long weekend.

Kiwis spent most of their time shopping for food, liquor, hardware and appliances over Easter.

The biennial Warbirds airshow in Wanaka also drew in many visitors, McGowan said.

A spokeswoma­n from the company that runs Dunedin’s Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin Venues Management Ltd (DVML), said confidenti­ality agreements meant details of how the city secured the Sheeran concerts would not be released. That included whether a one-off payment – understood to be six figures – was made to secure the concerts.

The spokeswoma­n confirmed the venue received commission­s from food and beverage sales.

The company worked hard to secure Sheeran for the Australasi­an leg of his Divide tour, as it did with other acts, she said.

Spending nationally through Paymark was $5.266m in March, up 5.7 per cent since March 2017.

The total number of transactio­ns in March was 113.5 million. Air New Zealand and Virgin Australia are ending their seven-year transTasma­n alliance. The airlines have been working together since 2010 to co-operate on services between New Zealand and Australia. Regulatory approval for the alliance expires at the end of October and the parties will not apply for renewal. Air New Zealand chief revenue officer Cam Wallace said market dynamics on the route had changed. ‘‘Australia is the largest source of inbound visitors to New Zealand and Air NZ has built up a significan­t presence in this market.’’ The move would enable the airline to use its own fleet and deliver ‘‘an improved schedule’’, he said.

Kiwi rocket fans will get their next fix in a few weeks, when Rocket Lab attempts to launch its first fully commercial flight from Ma¯hia Peninsula. The US company, founded by Kiwi Peter Beck, said the window for its next Electron rocket launch will be over a two-week period opening on April 20. About 25,000 people logged on to watch the launch of its last trial flight, live in January. The payload for the next launch will include satellites from ship-tracking company Spire Global and weathermon­itoring company GeoOptics.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Ed Sheeran and Easter put the monthly spending in overdrive, Paymark spending data shows.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Ed Sheeran and Easter put the monthly spending in overdrive, Paymark spending data shows.

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