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NEWS


Coronavirus hits Asia sales but overall impact ‘limited’


By TW reporters


Cruise lines, operators and agents were battling to deal with the fallout from the coronavirus this week amid conflicting signs as to whether continual news of the outbreak is affecting the wider travel market. A leading industry


analyst reported “no overall impact” on UK outbound bookings but confirmed: “Bookings are down for Asia.” However, Alan Bowen, legal


He said: “The China market


has collapsed. Long-haul is affected, although the US and Caribbean are doing well. There are growing concerns about trips with connections through the Far East, such as Singapore.” Passengers quarantined


STORY TOP


on Diamond Princess were preparing to leave as Travel Weekly went to press. The ship had been quarantined by Japanese health authorities


advisor to the Association of Atol Companies, suggested there was a general slowdown, saying: “Coronavirus is having a choking effect on bookings as people wait to see what happens. There are reports of lots of enquiries but conversion rates falling.”


travelweekly.co.uk


since February 3. On Tuesday, a total of 542 passengers were infected. The Foreign Office said it was


“working to organise a flight back to the UK” after coming under pressure to repatriate UK passengers. An evacuation was expected this week. Cruise lines acknowledged


bookings for Asia had been hit but said demand had switched elsewhere.


Antonio Paradiso, MSC Cruises’ UK and Ireland managing director, said: “Demand in Asia is dropping day after day. [But] we’ve seen big booking trends for Europe and the Caribbean where most of our capacity is deployed.” Harry Lightfoot, director of cruise


agency Fusion Cruises, suggested a shift in capacity to Europe could lift the market, saying: “Prices will drop now ships are coming back [to Europe].” Long-haul operators also reported


shifting demand. If Only product and distribution director Gordon McCreadie said: “Our cruise team have faced the biggest challenge. Our Far East team have experienced uncertainty from agents and customers nervous about travelling.” InsideJapan reported 64 clients


had cancelled trips to Japan and a similar number rebooked. A


spokesman said: “People are holding off confirming trips and enquiries have quietened considerably.” Wendy Wu Tours reported up


to 80% of clients booked to China in March had rebooked for later or switched destinations. Deputy managing director John Warr said: “India and Sri Lanka were our biggest- selling destinations last week. People are still booking China, but for 2021.” A Kuoni spokeswoman said:


“We’ve had calls from customers hesitant about travelling to Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. We haven’t charged an admin fee for anyone amending their plans.” She added: “The Caribbean, Africa and Latin America are seeing an upturn.” Exodus Travels reported a slow-


down in southeast Asia bookings. i Coronavirus round-up, page 12


20 FEBRUARY 2020 5


PICTURE: Shutterstock


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