Business Day

World Cup currency woes for fans

- Ronojoy Mazumdar and Hooyeon Kim

Football fans who travelled to Qatar knew the World Cup experience would not come cheap, but the resilience of the Gulf nation’s currency is making the trip particular­ly painful for travellers from South Korea, Japan and England.

Everything from hotel bills to the price of Coca-Cola at the stadium are pinching tourists, who in many instances are already dealing with sky-high inflation in their home countries.

The Qatari riyal is pegged to the US dollar, which has roiled markets this year with its strength. A gauge of global currency volatility is set for its highest annual average since 2016, thanks in part to aggressive rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve and the war in Ukraine.

The riyal has strengthen­ed almost 9% against the Korean won this year, which was hit by weakening exports and local housing market strains. It is up almost 17% against the yen, due to Japan’s monetary policy divergence with the US, and nearly 10% versus the pound, thanks to this year’s UK political crises.

Japan, South Korea and England all made it through to the knockout stage of the tournament.

“Preparing for the World Cup trip has been both physically and financiall­y burdensome,” said Choung Jongchan, a 32-year-old electronic goods salesperso­n from South Korea, who started preparing for his trip a year ago.

Choung recalled the process as a series of sleepless nights. Tickets were released little by little and many fans were dissatisfi­ed with the seats they were allocated, Choung said. He ended up reselling his tickets for better seats even though that meant higher ticket fees due to a stronger dollar and paying a 5% commission for using the official resale platform.

“By then, I already had two million won ($1,538) on my credit card,” Choung said.

ALCOHOL

Alcohol is banned in Qatar, but visitors are able to purchase a bottle of Budweiser at designated areas for about 50 riyals ($13.60), nearly 10 times the price of the same product in a convenienc­e store in South Korea.

For Japanese tourists more used to a deflationa­ry environmen­t, the sticker prices at World Cup venues are a particular shock. The yen hit a threedecad­e low against the dollar in October.

“A small PET bottle of water at the venue costs about 400 yen [$3], and Coca-Cola is about 600 yen — this is a big burden.” said Kazunori Takishima, 46, a real estate business owner in Tokyo. He was expecting to pay 25-30 yen per riyal during his trip, but instead has faced a rate of 35-40 per riyal instead.

Qatar has placed measures to mitigate rising costs, banning any over-the-counter ticket reselling and managing accommodat­ion costs through an official website. Public transporta­tion and SIM cards for internet connection are free for visitors holding the Hayya card, a fan ID for World Cup ticket holders.

Still, such efforts were not enough to offset the force of inflation and strong dollar.

“Some hotels settle payments six days before your stay, so even if you booked your stay months ago, you’d have to pay a bigger cost now because of higher exchange rates,” said Choung.

To prevent the cost of tickets ballooning upwards in pound terms, Aminoor Rashid, a 40year-old UK tax authority employee from Newton-le-Willows near Liverpool, asked his Doha-based friend to buy them on his behalf in July. At that point the British pound had fallen 12% against the riyal.

“I was concerned because the pound sterling depreciate­d very heavily against the dollar,” said Rashid, who was attending his first World Cup. “I didn’t overspend, I was lucky because I stayed with a friend and the main cost is accommodat­ion.”

RESERVATIO­NS

Im Sung Min, a 29-year-old mobile accessorie­s internatio­nal salesperso­n from South Korea, said while he was lucky to have made most of his reservatio­ns before the dollar soared, he is still planning to bring food and supplies to the games “in case I won’t be able to afford them on the ground”.

Of course, easing the pain to fans’ pockets is the thrill of being at the tournament.

“I wouldn’t miss what could be the last World Cup for soccer stars Son Heung-min, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo,” said Choung.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Costly fare: Fans in Tokyo watch Japan play. Many could not afford the steep prices in Qatar and chose to stay at home.
/Reuters Costly fare: Fans in Tokyo watch Japan play. Many could not afford the steep prices in Qatar and chose to stay at home.

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