A Booming Chinese Export
Last year, China exported 504 million pairs of socks, 73 
million cell phones…and 30 million tourists.
It’s true; tourists have become one of the country’s 
leading “exports.” Wanderlust, it seems, is but one of the 
many by-products of the flourishing Chinese economy. As 
Chinese tourism grows, many of the world’s leisure 
companies will enjoy what could be a very, very long boom. 
Two years ago, for the first time, outbound Chinese 
tourists outnumbered their Japanese counterparts. 
By 2020, the World Tourism Organization predicts Chinese 
will be taking about 100 million trips a year – placing 
them fourth on the list of the world’s most frequent 
travelers behind the United States, Germany and Japan. And 
by 2035, the Chinese will likely become the world’s leading 
globetrotters. Between now and then, many companies stand 
to benefit, especially those operating in and around China 
itself.
“Behind the forecasts of growth in Chinese tourism,” the 
New York Times reports, “are China’s booming economy and 
two crucial moves by the government last fall to placate 
the growing middle class. Instead of just a restricted pool 
of residents of Beijing, Shanghai and Guanzhou, residents 
of about 100 second-tier cities also were allowed to travel 
abroad. The government also increased the amount of foreign 
exchange a person may take out of the country, to $6,000 
from $2,000.” 
Thanks to their new liberties, nearly 30 million Chinese 
hopped on a plane last year, double the number who traveled 
abroad three years ago.
“Asia Pacific is now up, up, up and away the world’s most 
dramatic tourism performer,” says hotelasiapacific.com. 
“The star performer, of course, is China. In just four 
short years [although, looking back, they certainly don’t 
seem particularly ‘short’], the country’s tourism 
juggernaut has set new records – not just for its growth, 
but also for the breakneck speed of that growth.
The growing swarms of Chinese travelers are changing the 
face of tourism worldwide. For starters, many hoteliers 
have learned to apply Feng Shui concepts to room layouts, 
to serve “congee” [a rice porridge] on breakfast buffets 
alongside eggs and bacon and to avoid placing their Chinese 
guests on the “unlucky” fourth floor.
But Chinese tourists are also changing the ECONOMICS of 
global tourism.
“It is not just the sheer number of potential travelers 
that is making this group attractive, but also their 
spending power,” Eurobiz Magazinne relates. “Even before 
travel restrictions on Chinese citizens were eased, the 
relatively small numbers of Chinese travelers clocked in as 
the fourth-largest spending group of travelers in Europe, 
after the Japanese, Americans and the Russians, according 
to Global Refund.” 
Down in Australia, the Chinese already top the list of big-
spending tourists.
“All across the Pacific,” the New York Times reports, 
“officials are vying to net the elusive, wealthy Chinese 
tourist, seen as the big-spending successor to the Arab 
tourists of the 1970’s, fueled by oil dollars, and the 
brandaholic Japanese shoppers of the 80’s and 90’s. The 
Chinese now dominate or account for a large slice of 
foreign tourism in Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, Taiwan, 
Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia.”
We suspect, therefore, that hotel and leisure companies 
throughout the Pacific Rim will reap the bulk of the 
Chinese tourism bounty.
Last fall, Christopher Mayer, our colleague at the Fleet 
Street Letter, identified one such company: Orient Express 
Hotels (NYSE: OEH).
“The company owns a truly remarkable collection of 44 
luxury hotels, three distinctive restaurants, five tourist 
trains and one luxury cruise line,” Chris explained in his 
initial recommendation. “I like OEH’s global character. It 
is less dependent on the U.S. consumer, as it caters to the 
luxury travelers of the world. Whatever may happen in the 
world, there will always be a wealthy few, and they like to 
travel.”
Increasingly, those “wealthy few” are carrying Chinese 
passports.
It would be a stretch, however, to label OEH a pure “China 
play,” since only about one quarter of the company’s 
revenues derive from the Pacific Rim. But the stock has 
nearly doubled since Chris’ recommendation – a testimony 
both to Chris’ masterful stock-picking and to the global 
tourism boom.
Meanwhile, Shangri-La Asia Ltd. (Hong Kong: 69), a much 
more focused play on Chinese tourism, has gained “only” 45% 
since last fall.
Shangri-La, which describes itself as “the largest Asia-
based deluxe hotel group in the region,” owns or operates 
more than 60 hotels throughout the Pacific Rim. Shangri-
la’s hotels in China and Hong Kong kick in more than half 
the company’s net operating profit, while its hotels in 
Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines contribute most of 
the rest.
To be sure, the Shangri-La share price, at 20 times 
estimated earnings, reflects much of the company’s near-
term growth prospects. But we suspect the stock has not yet 
“priced in” its prospective earnings of 2035.
Pull up a chair, the Chinese tourism boom might be around 
for a while.
By Dr. Kurt Richebacher
What happens when a housing bubble expires?
An illuminating case in this respect is the very recent 
experience in the Netherlands. While traditionally a 
country highly conservative in its finances, it developed a 
housing bubble in 1998-99, after years of strong economic 
growth. House prices and credit growth soared at double-
digit rates. As homeowners cashing in on their burgeoning 
home equity went on a spending spree, the household savings 
rate plunged from 12.9% of disposable income in 1998 to 
6.8% just two years later.
As the chart above highlights, when the Dutch central bank
raised its short-term interest rate from 2.5% to 4.5% from 
1999-2000, house price inflation came to an abrupt halt. 
Household borrowing and mortgage equity withdrawal slumped 
sharply.
Being deprived of their “wealth effects,” the Dutch people 
returned to saving from their current income. Within just 
three years, the personal savings ratio was back to 12%, 
driving the Dutch economy into the worst recession among 
the industrialized countries. The growth rate of consumer 
spending sagged in a straight line from 4.7% in 1999 to 
minus 1.2% in 2003.
The Dutch example confirms that for consumer spending to 
slump in the wake of a fading housing bubble, house prices 
do not need to fall at all. It is sufficient that they stop 
rising, thereby depriving households of new wealth effects 
and the associated borrowing facilities.
Therefore, major housing bubbles imperatively end in a hard 
landing.
| Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | |
| DOW | 10,406 | 10,291 | -107 | -3.5% | 
| S&P | 1,202 | 1,191 | 3 | -0.9% | 
| NASDAQ | 2,070 | 2,045 | 7 | -4.9% | 
| 10-year Treasury | 3.97% | 3.91% | -0.07 | -0.24 | 
| 30-year Treasury | 4.25% | 4.20% | -0.07 | -0.58 | 
| Russell 2000 | 641 | 628 | 15 | -1.5% | 
| Gold | $435.45 | $440.00 | $8.40 | -0.5% | 
| Silver | $7.08 | $7.21 | -$0.19 | 3.9% | 
| CRB | 304.48 | 311.37 | 2.00 | 7.2% | 
| WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $58.20 | $60.54 | $4.66 | 33.9% | 
| Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 110.03 | JPY 109.31 | -1.40 | -7.3% | 
| Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2057 | $1.2160 | 62 | 11.0% | 
| Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8146 | $1.8289 | -25 | 5.4% | 

                            	        
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