Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

February 4, 2013

Accommodation Occupancy Rates Best in Five Years

Throughout recent months I have had this statement affirmed to me by many local complex managers; all claiming to have had their best previous 12-month period since the GFC. I am told by most managers that since 2010 each year has shown a marked improvement in trend occupancy rates in turn positively influencing the nightly room rates achieved. This is welcomed news for many owners of holiday apartments who have been hit with a double-edged sword following the GFC with decreased returns and also increased expenses almost exclusively associated with rising strata-title insurance levies.

HOTELIERS in the Far North have had their best three months of occupancy rates in five years.

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The latest edition of the Tourism and Transport Forum-HOSTPLUS National Accommodation Barometer shows continuing strong demand for accommodation in Australia.

Forum chief executive John Lee said the industry was benefiting from the relatively strong Australian economy and popularity of short breaks.

“Demand for accommodation in our capitals, along with the Gold Coast and Cairns, is very strong at 81.3 per cent for the September quarter, on par with the same period in 2011,” he said.

“Pleasingly, Cairns saw an occupancy rate of 76.6 per cent for the quarter.

“Port Douglas saw very strong revenue per available room growth compared with the September 2011 quarter.”

Accor’s Cairns hotels finished last year with an average occupancy for its city hotels of 80.1 per cent, up more than 1 percentage point on 2011 and almost 9 percentage points ahead of the overall Cairns market.

A stand-out performed for the group was the Pullman Reef Hotel Casino, which achieved its highest occupancy on record, averaged 84 per cent for the year.

Pullman Reef Hotel Casino general manager Wayne Reynolds said the strength of occupancy last year augured well for this year.

“...We saw an increase in meetings and conferences, along with growth in domestic leisure and inbound business, particularly from China...”

“Pleasingly, we saw an increase in meetings and conferences, along with growth in domestic leisure and inbound business, particularly from China,” he said.

Article printed in The Cairns Post – 31st January 2013

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Smithfield selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica, Kamerunga and surrounds.

January 30, 2013

Cairns Post: China Mulls Stronger Ties

Growing optimism is certainly evident within the local tourism industry in Cairns; Far North Queensland recently became the fastest growing region in Australia for Chinese travellers as a result of several major airlines commencing direct services. With rapid growth in visitors expected to continue throughout coming years the Chinese will place serious consideration into the establishment of a consulate in Cairns, just as the Japanese government did throughout the tourist boom in the 90's.

THE Chinese Government will consider establishing a consulate in Cairns after a call from business and tourism leaders.

The move comes as a second Chinese airline, China Southern, begins trial flights bringing travellers to the region tomorrow for the start of the Chinese New Year.

About 20,000 travellers are expected on the China Southern flights from Guangzhou as well as seven charters, China Eastern’s three-a-week services from Shanghai, Cathay Pacific’s daily flights from Hong Kong and on domestic flights from southern ports.

While a Canberra embassy spokeswoman said the Government believed its Brisbane-based consulate-general was capable of providing their citizens with consular assistance, it would be willing to discuss the suggestion.

“The consulate-general has provided effective consular protection and assistance to events involving Chinese citizens since the establishment (in Brisbane) and it is willing to further strengthen co-operation with the local authorities in Cairns in the future to provide Chinese citizens with a more convenient and timely consular assistance,” she said.

Advance Cairns chairman
Cam Charlton
 
Advance Cairns chairman Cam Charlton said he was pleased with the response.

“They have left the door open… they haven’t said yes, they haven’t said no,” he said.

Mr Charlton said the embassy appeared to be watching developments in the Far North.

“Obviously they are keeping an eye on Cairns with the significant increase in the number of Chinese visitors,” he said.

Mr Charlton said the Japanese established a consulate in 1997 after their residents started flocking to the region in the 1980s and ‘90s.

A Cairns Chinese consulate would service the needs of their citizens as well as investment and business interests, he said.

Mr Charlton said a consulate would make the visa process easier for holidaymakers and business people travelling to China from Cairns.

It would also help “build and sustain” the direct flights by China Eastern and the soon-to-start trial services by China Southern, he said.

Mr Charlton said once Advance Cairns finalised its China Business Engagement and Investment Strategy it would meet Chinese consular officials in the next few months.

The Far North is the fastest-growing region in Australia for Chinese travellers with 110,000 a year, on target to reach 200,000 by 2015.

The Far North is the fastest-growing region in Australia for Chinese travellers with 110,000 a year, on target to reach 200,000 by 2015.

The Japanese have had a consulate in Cairns for 15 years, The British, Germans, Austrians, Swedish and Italians also have consular representatives based in the city.

Article printed in The Cairns Post – 29th January 2013

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Smithfield selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica, Kamerunga and surrounds.

November 27, 2012

Chinese Businessman Buys Double Island Resort

Two recent large-scale commercial purchases are the talk of local business in Cairns at present; the first was mining magnate Clive Palmer's purchase of the Sea Temple Golf and Country Club at Port Douglas, and the second purchase by Chinese businessman Benny Wu based in Hong Kong of the Double Island Resort in Palm Cove. With commercial property values so affordable and light on the horizon for the local tourism industry these are likely to be the first of many large-scale acquisitions to come. Article text follows:


Double Island, Palm Cove
HONG Kong-based multi-millionaire Chinese businessman Benny Wu has bought luxurious Double Island resort near Cairns.

The former mining magnate told The Cairns Post he planned to spend $10 million developing and upgrading the resort to host wealthy Chinese holidaymakers and businessmen.

The deal with current owner, Sydney developer Sean Howard, was signed last night and witnessed by Cairns Mayor Bob Manning at the Kewarra Beach Resort, also owned by Mr Howard.

The price was not disclosed but the island was on the market for $8 million. Mr Howard paid $4.5 million for the island in 2000.

The purchase comes just a day after The Cairns Post revealed billionaire miner Clive Palmer had bought the Sea Temple Golf and Country Club at Port Douglas for about $7 million.

Double Island has a mix of accommodation, including Polynesian-style villas, luxury apartments and eco-tents all set amongst landscaped tropical gardens. The resort includes a beachside gymnasium, reportedly built for Keanu Reeves when the actor leased the island while filming The Matrix Reloaded.

Mr Wu said he "liked the island" and decided to buy it over lunch with Mr Howard about a year ago.

He intends to target "the very top end of the market" and fly in "very rich" holidaymakers and businessmen from Hong Kong, Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and other emerging cities in China using the direct Shanghai service by China Eastern, proposed direct Guangzhou flights by China Southern and Cathy Pacific's Hong Kong service.

Mr Wu said he wanted to create an exclusive "private club" and encourage corporations to hold meetings on the island.

Article printed by The Cairns Post - 8th November 2012
Writer: Nick Dalton

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Smithfield selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica, Kamerunga and surrounds.

November 22, 2012

The Cairns Post: Things Are Looking Up

Rob Gaison, the chief executive officer of Tourism Tropical North Queensland, recently took the opportunity to write to the Cairns Post highlighting his confidence that the local tourism industry has finally "turned a corner". His following article provides a timely account for the past, present and future outlook for local tourism including good reason for his renewed positivity following particularly difficult recent times experienced by Cairns' most valuable industry.

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The total solar eclipse crossing Far North Queensland today is the icing on the cake for our region.

We have has the best tourism season since the global financial crisis decimated the number of travellers worldwide and, happily, the strong visitor figures are continuing into our shoulder season.

With an estimated 60,000 visitors in tropical North Queensland for the once-in-a-lifetime experience of the moon blacking out the sun, more than 20 million people logging onto live broadcasts of the event and the surrounding publicity, we are centre stage before a whole new audience.

Never before have so many eyes been upon us, so we have grasped this opportunity that nature has presented us to remind both old friends and new travellers that centre stage is where we should be.

Far North Queensland offers many once-in-a-lifetime experiences. We have the world’s largest reef and oldest tropical rainforest.

We are the only place where two World Heritage areas are side by side and there are more than 650 daily touring options to explore these natural wonders.

Higher visitor numbers will bring a renewed interest in redeveloping attractions and building new infrastructure. Just last week Double Island and the Sea Temple Golf and Country Club at Port Douglas sold.

"It is no coincidence that this investment comes on the back of renewed optimism in tourism."

It is no coincidence that this investment comes on the back of renewed optimism in tourism.

Tourism is the economic driver of this region, generating seven million export dollars a day, employing 32,000 people and, importantly, introducing business and lifestyle opportunities to a new audience.

Tourism Tropical North Queensland has set bold goals, but our strategy to increase the value of tourism to our region by $1 billion to $3.2 billion in 2015 is on track.

Our marketing push has been enhanced by the State Government’s new direction of destinational funding and acknowledgement of regional tourism organisations.

We have been buoyed by the start of direct flights from China last month which are poised to take us towards our goal of 200,000 Chinese visitors by 2015.

The October CairnsWatch report further justifies the positive outlook for our economy.

Domestic airport arrivals increased by 7.7 per cent in the year to September and accommodation occupancy rose during the last quarter to 65.3 per cent.

Our strategy to diversify tourism into areas such as sporting events is paying dividends with the success of the Cairns Ironman boosting visitor numbers and 22 more events, including the Inaugural Great Barrier Reef Masters Games, poised to inject millions of dollars into the region.

The good times will not be fleeting. We are counting down to Chinese New Year, another peak period of demand.

In between, and beyond, our 2015 goals are firmly in mind with co-ordinated campaigns in key markets such as Japan where we are seeing growth.

Events such as Corroboree in May next year, which brings 300 Australian specialists to Cairns from Europe and the UK, will supercharge awareness of our region into the future.

A determined focus, hard work and nature’s helping hand have brought out the best in Tropical North Queensland.

Article published by The Cairns Post - 14th November 2012

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Smithfield selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica, Kamerunga and surrounds.

September 10, 2012

China Boom Good for Far North's Economy

Just a quick post to update on a "hot topic" in the Far North at present - the recent introduction of direct flights from China. As someone on the ground speaking with buyers each day this topic comes up in every conversation involving the outlook for the local economy and property markets. And for good reason; the largest industry in Cairns is tourism with agriculture worth only half that in total gross domestic product. Needless to say when international conditions deteriorated post-GFC the economy in Cairns suffered - for better or worse, tourism is our life-blood.

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With further direct flights from China now confirmed by Cathay Pacific Airlines the extent to which Cairns is able to take advantage of this emerging international market is of increasing speculation. Without doubt there will be further news to come!

China boom is good fortune for Far North's tourism industry
Article printed by The Cairns Post 6th September 2012

THE number of Chinese travelling to the Far North is expected to double to nearly 190,000 a year within 12 months of three new services coming on stream from next month.

That’s the prediction of Cairns Airport chief executive officer Kevin Brown after Cathay Pacific Airlines yesterday announced changes to its arrival and departure times from Hong Kong to link to its flights from mainland China.

It comes as Chinese visitor numbers to the Far North continue to soar with the latest figures showing a 27 per cent jump on 2011 figures to 94,000 in the year ended June 30.

China Eastern flights arrive from Shanghai in October, China Southern flights from Guangzhou in December and the changes in Cathay’s daily schedule to connect with flights from Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and other cities are from November.

Mr Brown said he expected the 3500 seats a week to be full.

"Passenger numbers could double within a 12-month period."

"Passenger numbers could double within a 12-month period," he said.

Mr Brown said the airport would be working with key organisations such as Advance Cairns, the chamber of commerce, Tourism Tropical North Queensland, James Cook University and the convention centre to ensure the success of the trial flights, to make them permanent, increase the frequency and to enhance the Cathay services.

"It’s not just tourism, but business, corporate, education and academia travel as well," he said.

Cathay’s Queensland business development manager Howard Field said the airline’s changes were to ensure smooth connection to flights between Hong Kong and eight cities in China and to prevent overnight stays in Hong Kong.

"We expect Chinese numbers to grow by 25 per cent," he said.

Tourism Tropical North Queensland chief executive officer Rob Giason said the flights meant the Far North was on target to reach 200,000 Chinese holidaymakers visiting the region by 2015. "But that could very well accelerate," he said.

Mr Giason said as well as the direct flights the industry expected to maintain the high numbers coming to Cairns from other cities such as Brisbane and Sydney.

According to Tourism Research Australia’s international visitor survey overall international visitors were down 6 per cent to 616,000 while spending was up $35 million to $800 million.

Cairns is the third most popular destination in Queensland for the Chinese after the Gold Coast (412,000, up 18 per cent) and Brisbane (109,000, up 35 per cent).

The survey also found the number of Japanese visitors was 87,000 (down 11 per cent), the UK 76,000 (18 per cent), the US 75,000 (down 1 per cent), NZ 44,000 (up 19 per cent) and Germany 41,000 (down 13 per cent).

Mr Brown said he treated the IVS figures, particularly Japan and Europe, with "a degree of caution".

"I don’t think they are as bad as that. I deal with actual passenger numbers not sample survey sizes," he said.

Mr Brown said he believed the Japanese figures were far better.

"I’ve been speaking to many tourism operators who have said they haven’t seen so many Japanese in a long time. It’s still a very strong market."

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Smithfield selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica, Kamerunga and surrounds.

July 28, 2012

China Eastern Airlines to start direct flights to Cairns

Earlier this year I posted an article published by The Age which highlighted the expectation of local tourism business leaders toward China providing the next boost to Far North Queensland's economy. The biggest hurdle to this was cited as the introduction of direct flights from the People's Republic... Now it's official!

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THE number of Chinese tourists travelling to the Far North is expected to soar with the first direct flights from the world's most populated country starting in less than three months.

More than 36,000 Chinese travellers will be able to fly non-stop from Shanghai to Cairns each year on the China Eastern Airlines flights three times a week with services beginning in October.

The flights, which The Cairns Post revealed last week, will inject an estimated $35 million a year into the economy.

Queensland Treasurer Tim Nicholls and Tourism Minister Jann Stuckey will meet China Eastern executives in Shanghai today.

Ms Stuckey will sign a co-operative letter of intent with the carrier’s marketing officer Dong Bo.

Mr Nicholls welcomed the announcement, saying the flights would bring more than 700 Chinese visitors to Cairns each week.

"The number of Chinese visitors to Queensland increased by 16 per cent in the 12 months to March this year, injecting $403 million into the Queensland economy," he said.

"Tourism is one of the four pillars of the Queensland economy and aviation access is vital to helping us achieve our target of doubling overnight visitor expenditure to $30 billion by 2020."

Ms Stuckey said the deal was struck using the Newman Government’s $8 million Attracting Aviation Investment Fund.

"Today’s announcement is great news, not only for our north Queensland tourism operators who did it tough after cyclone Yasi, but also for the whole state," she said.

"These flights will reduce the time Chinese tourists have to spend in transit, enabling them to spend more time and money visiting the world-renowned Great Barrier Reef."

"China Eastern is one of China’s largest and most valued airlines and we welcome them to Queensland with open arms."

Mr Dong said the new route offered mainland Chinese new access to Australia.

"Cairns as a major city in north Queensland serves as a gateway to numerous tourist sites throughout the country," he said.

Cairns Airport chief executive officer Kevin Brown said the services would have an "enormous impact" on tourism.

"After several years of successfully operating Chinese New Year charter flights to Cairns from Shanghai, it’s very exciting that China Eastern is now introducing a scheduled service," he said.

"It will help strengthen Cairns’ position as the Asian gateway to Australia."

China is the region’s fastest growing source of holidaymakers, overtaking Japan in the year to March 31.

Article printed by The Cairns Post - 20th July 2012
Writer: Nick Dalton

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Cairns Beaches selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica and surrounds.

May 20, 2012

China Predicted to Provide the Next Boost to FNQ

An article printed by The Age this weekend provides a timely account for the economic environment experienced in Far North Queensland throughout the past 4 years following the first impacts of the Global Financial Crisis. It is not hard to understand why the business climate in the Far North has reacted to depressed international tourism conditions in the way that it has, tourism is the largest industry in Far North Queensland with its gross domestic product (GDP) historically worth double that of agriculture, the second largest industry.

Most interesting are the personal accounts provided toward the end of the article by Cairns locals who assert that pronounced fluctuations in economic growth is just something that Cairns is used to, and that they are confident that the emerging Chinese tourist market will provide The Far North with its next much needed “boost”.

Perfect storms lash one-time tourist mecca
The Age - May 19th 2012

ALONG The Esplanade in Cairns, scores of tourism outlets tussle grimly for passing trade. ''Hello!'' cry attendants to passing strangers from the doorways of cafes and restaurants, their hopeful smiles fading as each potential dollar moves on.

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Tour companies and their agencies display racks of brochures for countless struggling attractions spread across far north Queensland, each one a survivor of the longest, most comprehensive slump ever to strike the region. At night, while coach operators vie for backpackers to take on pub crawls, restaurants with prices pared to the bone hire young women in short dresses to stand on the footpath spruiking their menus and feigning interest in the doings of tourists.

It's tough up here.

More than 400 small businesses and several large development companies have gone to the wall since the slump began to bite in 2006-07. Compounded by the closure of the Cairns-based Australian Airlines in 2007, as well as the GFC, the Asian financial crisis, the high Australian dollar and the natural disasters of 2010-11, the downturn became a locally focused recession affecting every aspect of the economy.

Tourism, which returned $2.6 billion across the region in 2005-06, is now down by about $300 million, and Cairns (population 160,000) has an unemployment rate of 9.8 per cent - among the nation's highest, and double the state average. Despite promising signs of a recovery led by Chinese tourists, the European, UK and US markets - once the bread and butter of local tourism - remain mired in their own economic woes.

''China is the only growing market at the moment,'' says Steve Davies (pictured), operations manager of Big Cat Green Island Cruises. ''Everything else is stagnant, shrinking, dead or going nowhere.''

Bigger businesses such as Davies' have hung on by cutting costs, reducing staff, delaying equipment upgrades and sharing boat space with rival operators on days when there aren't enough passengers to make two cruises viable. Other major companies have been forced to diversify, merge or chase government tenders.

But small retailers, the so-called ''mum and dad'' operators, have been left with nowhere to hide. For veteran publican Gayle Scowcroft the crunch came last month, when she was forced to call in a liquidator, cut her losses and close the doors of Cairns' historic 114-year-old Cape York Hotel. Scowcroft's six-year battle to make a go of it seems to bear testament to the reigning wisdom among local hardheads. (''Tourism in Cairns has changed forever,'' asserts one real estate agent. ''Forget sentiment; from now on only the lean and mean will survive.'')

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But the popular and easy-going ex-publican, while admitting she made mistakes, has a different take on the circumstances that left her ''on the bones of my bum'' and $100,000 in debt. ''The whole thing made me realise just how much our country is based on greed,'' says the one-time Toowoomba school teacher who, with her late husband, Doug, had operated three other pubs before she and her son Ben took over the Cape York in 2006.

By 2010, she says, three new supermarket-owned liquor outlets (two Dan Murphys and a First Choice) had opened in Cairns, and her drive-through bottle shop couldn't compete.

The worsening tourism slump, rising rents, electricity and insurance costs added to her dilemma.

''I saw the writing on the wall, but I was pigheaded and a bit proud and I just wouldn't give up,'' Scowcroft says.

''My landlord wouldn't negotiate on the rent … Then my insurance went from $16,000 to $30,000, and they demanded the whole lot or I'd be uninsured … that's when I knew I'd have to get out.'' Scowcroft says she will stay in Cairns and try to find other work - ''perhaps on the political side of things. I'd like to do something to help the place recover.''

Over the past few years the slump has also claimed three of Cairns' largest construction/development tycoons: one-time plumber Tom Hedley (whose Hedley Leisure and Gaming Property Fund was valued at $1.2 billion in 2008); Roy Lavis (whose CEC Group collapsed last year with debts of almost $135 million); and Glencorp and Glenwood Homes owner Udo Jattke, who shut down his 30-year-old business last year owing $30 million.

Gavin King, as a Cairns Post journalist, wrote about these closures being part of a domino effect triggered by the tourism slump. He is now the new Liberal National Party state member for Cairns (the first conservative elected to the seat in more than a century) and says locals had not realised how inexorably their fortunes were linked to tourism until the ''big three'' went under.

''In past slumps, like the pilots' strike [in 1989], and the lull after 9/11, the big operators were able to hang on with ancillary businesses,'' King told The Saturday Age. ''But this is much worse … these past four to six years have been a really prolonged period of pain. A lot of businesses are still on their knees. But there is an air of hope, particularly in the situation with China, and the push for Cairns to get direct [tourism] flights from that country.''

The Chinese market in Australia is potentially so big, tourism operators haven't enough adjectives for the wonders they believe it will unleash. But in Cairns - long vexed by the geographic isolation that separates it from major tourism air routes - the word they invariably use is ''salvation''.

The obstacle in establishing direct flights from China is that far north Queensland doesn't have the population to sustain return flights. But Gavin King, flush with an $8 million ''attracting aviation fund'' from the state government, reckons he willl make direct flights a reality within 12 months: ''The great example for how this could happen is Cathay Pacific, which has been bringing Chinese tourists to Cairns from Hong Kong for years, then returning with the bellies of their planes full of live local seafood. We're confident we can achieve the same thing with direct flights from China, returning with cargoes of seafood or agricultural products.''

Charles Woodward's CaPTA Group has been marketing its local tourist attractions in China since 1997. Raised on a cane farm in what is now part of Cairns' inner suburbs, Woodward was among a handful of entrepreneurs who helped open the region to international tourism. With Jim Wallace, founder and former owner of the Quicksilver Group (and now owner of Big Cat Green Island Reef Cruises), and a few others, Woodward formed a ''marketing mafia'' and toured the world promoting his birthplace and the Great Barrier Reef.

He opened his famous RainForestStation Nature Park at Kuranda in 1976, since bolstered by other nature-based attractions, including the Cairns Wildlife Dome atop the Cairns Casino. ''Most of our tourists were domestic until the Cairns International Airport opened in 1984,'' Woodward says. ''After that, we had the real boom phase when all the airlines used to run into Cairns [which ended after the pilots' strike] … then the Christopher Skase white-shoe wankers phase. Next came the Japanese market boom in the early '90s, which is when Daikyo came into Cairns and developed a lot of the major hotel infrastructure.'' (With economic problems of their own, even before last year's earthquake/tsunami, the Japanese no longer have a corporate presence in far north Queensland.)

"...We're now heading into the Chinese phase... the moment we get direct flights, the Chinese market here will take off like it did in the Japanese boom..."

''We're now heading into the Chinese phase,'' he says confidently. ''The moment we get direct flights, the Chinese market here will take off like it did in the Japanese boom.''

Even without direct flights, 70,000 tourists from mainland China are visiting Cairns annually, mostly via Melbourne, Sydney or Brisbane. Thanks to his marketing legwork in China, 90 per cent of these arrivals dutifully turn up at RainForestStation. ''When they started coming about 12 years ago it was all government-sponsored tours, so a lot of them were factory managers and the like in Mao suits,'' he says. ''Now, as the country opens up, we're getting the whole range - from very sophisticated to very unsophisticated.''
Which sounds a bit like customer service in Cairns, where larger tourism operations are already schooling their staff in the nuances of being ''China-ready''.

View article source HERE

Peter Musso licensed real estate agent at Ray White Cairns Beaches selling property in Cairns' beautiful northern beach suburbs including Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach, Caravonica and surrounds.

September 12, 2010

CHINA: CAIRNS’ FASTEST GROWING MARKET

China has now become the Tropical Norths’ fourth largest source for international visitors and is now the fastest growing segment with an average annual growth of 62%.

Tourism Tropical North Queensland chief executive officer Rob Giason said the growth in visitors from the region of China is "very encouraging". The Chinese market shows interest in nature tourism and as such Cairns is seen as one of the most attractive destinations within Australia.

Read full article from the Cairns Post

Cairns international airport passenger numbers are currently rising strongly as a result of the extra flights which commenced in March/April 2010, and have regained more than half the drop that occurred at the end of 2008. This is an excellent result for the region which has experienced slow economic recovery since the beginning of the GFC due to its high dependence on tourism conditions.

Cairns median house prices have always shown distinct cycles relative to international and domestic tourism conditions. Setbacks for the industry have included the threat of cyclones, and more notably, the Pilot’s Strike in 1989 during which median property values within the region saw a sharp decline of almost 20%.

The Global Financial Crisis coupled with the Bird and Swine Flu epidemics during 2008 were the cause for the most recent downturn in tourism arrivals, however the evidence is now showing that stronger tourist numbers this season are generating a significant improvement in industry conditions compared to last year.

With an increase in international arrivals and tourist expenditure within the region, real estate markets in Cairns can hope for improved housing affordability and foreign investment in turn placing upward pressure on median values once again.

Peter Musso - Ray White Cairns Beaches - Property agent selling real estate in Trinity Beach, Kewarra Beach, Clifton Beach, Palm Cove, Trinity Park, Smithfield, Yorkeys Knob, Holloways Beach, Machans Beach

May 4, 2010

Cairns Linked to Fast-Growing Taiwanese Tourism

Jetstar has announced it will operate a daily flight from Taipei to Osaka with connections to Cairns.

Airline communications head Simon Westaway said the connections had “great potential” for the Far North’s tourism industry. He said it would also make it easier for visitors from China to get to Cairns.

Taiwan is Australia’s 14th largest inbound market which grew 18 per cent last year, the second fastest among the top 20 inbound markets, with just under 100,000 visitors.

Read full article