Otago Daily Times

‘The Americans are on their way’

- TRACEY ROXBURGH tracey.roxburgh@odt.co.nz

A QUEENSTOWN hotelier believes numbers of tourists visiting from the United States will rebound with a vengeance this summer.

The Rees Hotel chief executive Mark Rose returned to the resort yesterday following a twoweek Destinatio­n Queenstown marketing roadshow, involving 12 Queenstown operators, with stops in Vancouver, Canada, then on to Chicago, Boston, New York, Philadelph­ia and Washington DC in the United States.

Following that, he attended Tourism New Zealand’s (TNZ) Kiwi Link event in Los Angeles, attended by about 40 New Zealand operators and 70 buyers from the US, Canada and Mexico.

Prior to that, he independen­tly visited 18 cities in Europe, the Middle East and Southeast Asia to market his hotel.

He told the Otago Daily Times yesterday,‘‘the Americans are on their way’’.

‘‘We are seeing at our hotel huge demand from September onwards out of the United States, with Christmas, January, February and March looking really strong.’’

He predicted that demand would continue to grow, particular­ly given the exchange rate at present — about US63c.

He also expected the Singaporea­n and Malaysian markets to come back quickly, but he predicted it might be some time before the European and United Kingdom markets returned.

‘‘In Europe, it’s a little different — flights are expensive and harder to come down through Singapore . . . If I think about the UK market, . . . Brexit has been very difficult for them, and costs have gone through the roof.

‘‘I don’t see that market coming back as strongly as I see the US market coming back.’’

Mr Rose thought the Australian market would hold strong through spring and summer and said he was ‘‘a believer that China could be open on December 1’’.

‘‘If that’s the case, we’re probably not ready for that.’’

While staffing shortages have been making headlines for months in Queenstown — and across New Zealand — affecting almost every industry, Mr Rose said it was a ‘‘worldwide phenomenon’’.

For example, he stayed in a hotel in LA which cost $NZ600 a night which was not cleaned for three days.

But he remained concerned about the potential reputation­al damage for Queenstown if staffing issues continued to hinder guest experience­s.

‘‘It’s better than we were a year ago, but it’s still not fun.’’

TNZ is running Kiwi Link in the UK, and at the end of the month Kiwi Link Asia will be held in Singapore.

Destinatio­n Queenstown chief executive Mat Woods said at Kiwi Link in the US there was ‘‘huge interest’’ in visiting New Zealand and, in particular, Queenstown.

PreCovid, the US was the resort’s secondbigg­est internatio­nal market by expenditur­e, accounting for 17% to the year end June 2019, behind Australia (32%).

China was third with 13%, followed by the UK (7%).

Mr Woods said now New Zealand’s borders were almost fully open, operators and businesses had certainty to plan for summer, ‘‘which is really important’’.

However, future demand from internatio­nal markets would be constraine­d for the time being by airline connectivi­ty and staffing issues.

While he saw yesterday’s border reopening — through which student and visitor visa applicatio­ns opened — as the ‘‘last piece of the puzzle’’, it was still ‘‘just the start of that recovery’’.

‘‘I think this is going to take three years before we start to see the new norm.

‘‘We don’t have all the airlines, we don’t have all the connectivi­ty, so there’s definitely capacity constraint­s there, and then, here, on the ground, there are definitely staff constraint­s as well.

. . It’s going to take a while [to get to 100%].’’

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Creating demand . . . About 40 New Zealand operators met about 70 buyers from Canada, the United States and Mexico in Los Angeles last week.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Creating demand . . . About 40 New Zealand operators met about 70 buyers from Canada, the United States and Mexico in Los Angeles last week.

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