India's travel industry sees a surge in demand, says travel companies

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India's travel industry sees a surge in demand, says travel companies

After being one of the worst affected sectors in the pandemic for close to two years, travel and tourism industry is finally seeing a recovery. Strong pent up demand, along with easing of international restrictions in the face of limited reopening of domestic borders, has brought Indian destinations into the spotlight, travel companies say. Places like Leh-Ladakh, Kashmir, Himachal, Uttarakhand, Andamans, Kerala, North East, Goa, and Gujarat are some of the most preferred travel destinations post the opening up of the industry.

The British travel agency Thomas Cook has seen a significant surge of 500 per cent in July as compared to a low base of last year. But even month-on-month the company saw a 150 per cent growth in India.

Our domestic bookings have already crossed our pre-pandemic levels and this in just 9 months of 2021. Our forward pipeline is robust, propelled by the upcoming festive season over 5 x growth over 2020 with key segments being multi-generational family units, young professionals millennials and couples honeymooners, said Rajeev Kale, President and Country Head Holidays, MICE, Visa Thomas Cook India.

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The company says that it is not just seeing a surge in demand from the metros but also from mini-metros like Jaipur and Tier 2 and 3 markets like Lucknow, Indore, Madurai, Kochi, Nagpur, Aurangabad, etc. A lot of people, say travel companies, prefer socially-distant travel options.

With the pandemic ushering in focus on travel options away from crowds, we have created demand for outdoor adventure elements via the launch of our unique and exciting biking trips to destinations like Leh, Srinagar, Manali, Sikkim, and South India and we are seeing uptick from diverse segments like millennials and c-suite head honchos. To push the envelope further, we have incorporated truly eclectic and non-standard accommodation including stays in havelis, forts, colonial villas and plantation bungalows amidst verdant tea coffee estates, Kale says.

He adds that the first phase of domestic reopening saw demand for affordable luxury holidays such as workations, staycations, drivecations, easy to book, practical holidays, etc. Travellers sought quick breaks to counter the stresses of work from home chores and at convenient short distances within their city of residence. Today, we are seeing a discernible shift from merely drivecations during the earlier phase post reopening, to increased uptick for flight inclusive holidays indicative of growing consumer confidence in air travel, he said.

Credit rating agency ICRA said that the industry witnessed faster-than-expected ramp up in Q 2 FY 22, because of lower restrictions, increasing pace of vaccination and pent-up demand, which resulted in revenge travel. The industry is expected to clock at least 45 - 50 per cent of pre-covid - 19 revenues in FY 22. Further, it is also likely to report operating profits in the current fiscal, aided by improved operating leverage and sustenance of some of the cost-optimisation measures undertaken in FY 21. However, the situation is still evolving and remains contingent on the efficacy of vaccines and a potential third Covid wave, it said in a report.

Also read: Domestic travel to increase by 60% this festive season, survey finds.

It added that revenues are expected to increase by 85 - 90 per cent sequentially in Q 2 FY 22. Occupancy has picked up, with the August 21 pan-India premium hotel occupancy at 44 - 46 per cent. Demand in the last few months has come from staycations, weddings and travel to special leisure destinations, and from driveable purpose groups. There is the new trend of biscations which is picking up from a resort that is working. Business travel pickup has been mainly to specific sites manufacturing locations from project sites, said Vinutaa S, Assistant Vice President and Sector Head, ICRA Limited.

Homegrown hospitality player OYO said that another interesting trend is that a majority of travellers prefer making bookings closer to the travel day as long weekend trips, short breaks or experiential travel to domestic locations have witnessed a spike in demand. Travellers are increasingly opting for short-haul destinations, it said.

This is a striking shift from the pre-Covid 19 era when travel was extensively planned and bookings were made weeks or even months in advance. Global travel restrictions adversely affected the travel and tourism industry, however, we significantly improved our unit economics during this period. We believe our shift towards leveraging products and technology and our focus on core growth markets has helped us navigate through the challenges created by the Covid - 19 pandemic as well as create a robust foundation for future growth, an OYO spokesperson told Business Today.

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The company said that its adjusted gross profit margin improved from 9.7 per cent in FY 20 to 33.2 per cent in FY 21. Within 12 weeks of joining the platform, OYO-powered hotel storefronts generated 1.5 to 1.9 times more revenue on average compared with the average revenue estimated at independent hotels of similar size in India, Indonesia and Malaysia respectively in 2019, the company said.

Taking cues from Janmashtami, Ganesh Chaturthi and Dussehra long weekends, the industry expects a similar spike during upcoming long weekends in the next couple of months.