The Philippine Star

Thai cosmetics, food firms tap into Chinese tourism boom

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BANGKOK (Reuters) – The label on the pink and white box of face cream sold in a Bangkok hypermarke­t proudly declares that it is based on a “snail secretion filtrate moisture system”. The Snail White branding – plus some positive internet reviews – is enough to have Chinese tourists recently lining up to buy the slime-infused product.

Alice Chen, 21, a Chinese college student, says she saw the face cream reviewed online and wanted to try it out because she couldn’t get it back home. And a 22-year-old Chinese tourist also at the Big C Ratchadamr­i store, who only gave her name as Yvonne, said she bought some – it retails at about $40 a box – because “a blogger said it was good and inexpensiv­e.”

Meanwhile, at a dessert cafe just up the road in Bangkok’s upscale Siam Paragon shopping center, another group of Chinese tourists take pictures on their phones of whimsical treats made from durian – the yellow fruit known for its sulfury smell that is mainly grown in Southeast Asia.

About 11 million Chinese tourists are expected to come to Thailand this year, up from just over one million in 2010, making China by far the biggest source of tourism here. And they are spending more per head than previously, according to Thai government figures. And it isn’t only the hotels, tour opera- tors and airlines that are benefiting. A big slice of this spending is with retailers, restaurant­s, and food and cosmetics makers that target the Chinese audience.

Investors have taken note, driving up the share prices of many of the companies concerned to high price-toearnings ratios. So far, in some cases, that securities analysts say they are wary of valuations, especially as tourists’ tastes can change rapidly.

Do Day Dream Pcl, the company behind the skin-whitening Snail White cream, is one. Boxes of the firm’s signature cream, which the firm says it makes from snail slime extracted using a process done in South Korea, are stacked high at Thailand’s airports and malls as it has become a must-buy item for many Chinese visitors who covet paler skin.

Sales of the Snail White products have been skyrocketi­ng since 2014 as beauty bloggers in Hong Kong and Singapore gave them rave reviews, according to Do Day Dream chief financial officer Piyawat Ratchapols­itte.

In 2017, the company’s revenue ballooned 35 percent to 1.7 billion baht ($52 million) as the company also built a strong Thai domestic market and grew online sales direct to Chinese consumers. It also sells other snail secretion-based products, including shower gel and lotions.

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