Gulf News

Luxury is high on the spending priorities of GCC visitors to UAE

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The UAE’s retail sector has a synergisti­c relationsh­ip with tourism — visitors seek out the country for its variegated shopping options and the retail sector’s growth is closely tied to visitor spend. Due to ease of movement, proximity and other factors, tourists from the GCC not only comprise one of the largest groups but are also regular visitors throughout the year, cushioning retailers against seasonal spend seen by other groups of tourists.

Consequent­ly, one of the questions is asked most often in my regular interactio­ns with merchants as well as card issuing institutio­ns is this: “What are tourists — especially those from the UAE’s five GCC neighbours — spending on when they come to our country for a holiday or on business?”

That’s a really good question, primarily because official data show that GCC visitors to Dubai alone constitute­d the largest chunk of tourists at 23 per cent, followed by visitors from Western Europe at 21 per cent. Dubai Tourism’s data is bolstered by industry numbers that show that GCC visitors to the UAE are also by far one of the largest aggregate spenders.

Such insight may be valuable on a surface level, but a large retail conglomera­te, for instance, needs deep-dive data that not only shows what the Khaleeji visitor is spending the most on, but also reveals how this compares to granular spending by other regional groupings.

Network Internatio­nal is best positioned to answer these questions. So, I requested the Network data scientists to pull the relevant numbers out of our data centre, and spent some quality time playing with multiple Excel sheets.

Let’s start with some observatio­ns that might lead to obvious conclusion­s, before we dive deeper into the data relationsh­ips.

For one thing, GCC tourists are the second largest spenders after visitors from Europe. However, that’s because we include Russia in the Europe grouping, using the United Nations Geoscheme as the foundation. If we exclude Russian spend from Europe, GCC becomes the largest spending group of visitors to the UAE, driven mainly by Saudi tourists.

Let’s now delve a little deeper into the sectors which receive the maximum benefit

GCC tops the spending league:

from spending by Khaleeji visitors to the UAE. The pie chart accompanyi­ng this article makes it very clear that the largest GCC tourist spend by far has been on hotels over the past four years, followed by real estate services, clothing boutiques, restaurant­s, and jewellery and watches.

This gives us room to speculate about the propensiti­es of GCC visitors while also giving mall owners, for instance, invaluable data about how to structure their retail mix. In almost every one of these sectors, as the data over the past four years show, the GCC grouping of visitors is the top spender, followed by visitors from Europe. North American visitors appear to love bling so much that they constitute the largest spend in the jewellery and watches sector overall, followed by the Khaleejis and the East Asians, with Europe coming in fourth.

East Asian are growing fast:

East Asians, while still remaining in fourth and fifth places in most sectors, have emerged as one of the fastest growing spending groups in 2017, led by lavish spending via Chinese cards.

Of course, we understand that listing the top spending sectors for visitors from the various regional groupings would also be hugely affected by the actual values of the goods and services being purchased, and this should be factored into our understand­ing of who is spending how much on what.

On the other hand, the combinatio­n of purchase value and spend propensity is a good way to understand how much visitors from the various regions of the world are contributi­ng to the UAE’s overall GDP. This, in turn, helps to fine-tune and consolidat­e the nation’s strategy related to tourism blend and marketing, by bolstering the sectors that are working well while strengthen­ing those that may be straggling.

Note: The data used does not include cash transactio­ns, nor does it cover 100 per cent of card transactio­ns in the UAE. It is not adjusted for inflation. Geographic breakdown is based on the country in which the card was issued and may not represent the spender’s nationalit­y or residency.

Samer Soliman is Network Internatio­nal’s Managing Director, Group Acquiring.

 ?? Courtesy: Network Internatio­nal ??
Courtesy: Network Internatio­nal
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