logo
India's travel boom enters the departure lounge

India's travel boom enters the departure lounge

Reuters12-02-2025

BENGALURU, Feb 12 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Indian Hotels (IHTL.NS), opens new tab, owner of the luxury Taj brand, is emerging as a flag bearer of the South Asian country's tourism boom. The $12 billion company on Monday unveiled a fifth hotel under development in Mumbai. Overall it plans to more than double its footprint of properties to over 700 by 2030, and at least 10%, opens new tab of the additions will be overseas. But as domestic room tariffs hit the roof, Indians are increasingly eyeing overseas destinations.
The company shows no sign of being affected by a domestic consumption slowdown that is rippling across the economy. Revenue hit 25.9 billion rupees ($296 million) in the three months to the end of December, up 29% year-on-year, and its EBITDA margin grew 80 basis points to over 39%. Over the past 12 months, the stock outperformed the rallying Nifty 50 (.NSEI), opens new tab by 34 percentage points and Indian Hotels is valued at 63 times its earnings for financial year 2025, roughly double the multiple for Marriot International (MAR.O), opens new tab and Hilton Hotel (HLT.N), opens new tab.
Rich Indians are splurging on weddings and events, and people are hungry for experiences. Coldplay's concert in Ahmedabad in January had an audience, opens new tab of 134,000, and room rates, opens new tab for one nearby Taj property leapt as high as 120,000 rupees, roughly $1,386, for a double-occupancy two-night stay. It's not a one-off: a shortage of hotels in prime locations is pushing up prices across the board even though foreigners are visiting India in fewer numbers than before the Covid pandemic.
Overseas destinations start to look relatively attractive to domestic travellers beyond a certain expense, says Amit Kumar at HDFC Securities. India may become the world's fourth-largest market for outbound tourism after the United States, China and Germany, up from 10th, by 2035, says Capital Economics. Popular destinations for the South Asian country's travellers include the Maldives, United Arab Emirates, Oman and Thailand.
Concerns about the sustainability of room rates within India are growing, however. Karan Khanna, an analyst at Ambit Capital, warns of a potential faster-than-expected surge in domestic supply as rivals including ITC Hotels (ITCT.NS), opens new tab announce significant expansion plans in smaller cities. To address those worries, Indian Hotels is talking up its capital-light investment strategy. For now, it is on the move with rich India.
Follow @ujjainidutta_, opens new tab
CONTEXT NEWS
Indian Hotels Company on January 17 reported revenue of 25.9 billion rupees ($296 million) in the three months to the end of December, up 29% from the same period last year. Net profit for the period also rose 29% to 5.8 billion rupees.
For more insights like these, click here, opens new tab to try Breakingviews for free.
Editing by Una Galani and Aditya Srivastav
Breakingviews
Reuters Breakingviews is the world's leading source of agenda-setting financial insight. As the Reuters brand for financial commentary, we dissect the big business and economic stories as they break around the world every day. A global team of about 30 correspondents in New York, London, Hong Kong and other major cities provides expert analysis in real time.
Sign up for a free trial of our full service at https://www.breakingviews.com/trial and follow us on Twitter @Breakingviews and at www.breakingviews.com. All opinions expressed are those of the authors.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Young Britons are swapping hard work for handouts
Young Britons are swapping hard work for handouts

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Young Britons are swapping hard work for handouts

Young people aren't idiots. Hard work doesn't, as they've realised, lead to guaranteed success. Just 16pc of the students who have been polled by charity The 93% Club believe that it's the hardest working or most talented who land the top jobs. Most – 72pc – instead believe career success simply boils down to who you know. Why slog away, many will conclude, if hard work gets you nowhere. Most have already clocked that the old way of doing things – work hard, buy a house – is a distant memory. Almost half a million more young people are living at home with their parents than they were two decades ago. So in many ways it's understandable that so many enter adulthood feeling 'meh' about working life, with almost a million -year-olds neither working, training nor studying. They might be unfairly perceived as entitled, overly fragile and eager to waste money on avocado and lattes. But with wages stagnant, job vacancies falling and cost of living high – it's no wonder so many have concluded that hard work only pays off for the very privileged or very lucky. All fair enough, especially for those whose education and early careers were upended by Covid lockdowns. But now it's time for young Britons to stop moping and move on. Every generation has had its challenges, so this surrendering of any ambition is getting boring. Older generations didn't stroll out of school and go straight into home ownership. There were often gruelling factory jobs from the age of 15, minimal holidays and poor living conditions to get through first. Hard work was always part of the deal. Working hard at the start of a career has until recently been considered a given, but now it's almost fashionable among young workers to be seen doing the bare minimum. Social media users are live-quitting their jobs on TikTok or dishing out advice on how to get away with doing as little as possible in a nine-to-five. Hospitality businesses which typically rely on young staff are struggling to hire those who just want to work from home, while the Lords have been told that unemployed youngsters 'on the internet 24 hours a day' now don't want to get out of bed for a salary of less than £40,000. If young people seemed happy with all of this, then why not – older generations certainly have a thing or two to learn about work-life balance and putting any career stress into perspective. Nobody looks back on their life wishing they spent more time in the office and less time with their children, for example. But rates of depression and anxiety among young people have been soaring in recent years, suggesting that rising unemployment or a deliberate lack of ambition isn't leaving anyone with a spring in their step. For many, this deliberate tapping out of adulthood won't feel like real freedom at all. But young Britons aren't exactly flushed with choice. Last week we learnt that 274,000 jobs have been lost over the last 12 months. The Government is determined to change that, and is urging businesses such as care home operators to train up unemployed Britons instead of recruiting from overseas. In reality, nothing will shift while hard work is considered a failure. Geoff Butcher, who runs several care homes in the Midlands, told my colleague last month that most UK job applicants never turn up for interviews, while the few who do end up failing probation or quitting in the first three months. 'The majority of them just find it too hard work,' he said, adding that the benefit system is a large part of the problem; 'It's a way of life, kind of bumping along the bottom'. Many British workers simply don't fancy these demanding roles. But the state cannot step in and give everyone a friction-free life, and nor should it. While the reasons for some young people wanting to snub hard work are understandable to an extent, giving in to a life of idleness can lead to depression, loneliness or – as former Tory chancellor Lord Hammond recently put it – a drift towards entitlement which can become hard to shake. 'The modern welfare state has turned from a culture of mutual self-help to a world that is based on rights,' he told The Telegraph recently. ''It's my right to be protected by the state.' 'It's my right to be fed and housed and clothed and provided for with healthcare and everything else, regardless of whether I contribute or not.' That's a very different cultural approach to the challenge of the balance of the state versus the individual's responsibility.' Yet it's a hard cycle to break out of. Those who have been out of work can lose confidence about going back. Hard work has become part of the culture war narrative, with Nigel Farage recently claiming that Reform voters are 'alarm clock' people who are up early and working hard. In reality, underneath the apparent lack of ambition and apathy towards work, most young adults would like to be an 'alarm clock' person with somewhere to be. They just might need some extra help realising that.

Rupee nearly flat, wedged between risk-aversion and exporter dollar sales
Rupee nearly flat, wedged between risk-aversion and exporter dollar sales

Reuters

time3 hours ago

  • Reuters

Rupee nearly flat, wedged between risk-aversion and exporter dollar sales

MUMBAI, June 16 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee was little changed on Monday as the impact of risk aversion spurred by an escalation of the Iran-Israel conflict ran into dollar sales from exporters and a rise in local equities. The rupee was at 86.0625 against the U.S. dollar as of 11:50 a.m. IST, nearly flat compared to its close at 86.08 in the previous session. India's benchmark equity indexes, the BSE Sensex (.BSESN), opens new tab and Nifty 50 (.NSEI), opens new tab, rose about 0.7% each, turning around from two days of losses spurred by rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. The conflict between Iran and Israel escalated over the weekend with both countries launching fresh attacks. Worries over the conflict pushed up crude oil prices with Brent futures quoting at $74.69 per barrel, up over 15% over June so far. "Rising geopolitical tensions have overshadowed positive inflation data from India, driving USD/INR above the 86.00-level. Higher energy costs could weigh on India's trade balance and stoke inflation," MUFG Bank said in a note. India's trade data for May is due later in the day. Economists polled by Reuters expect India's merchandise trade gap to have narrowed slightly to $25 billion last month, down from $26.4 billion in April. Traders said dollar-selling interest from exporters alongside a broad pullback in the greenback was supporting the rupee. The dollar index was down 0.1% at 98.1 while Asian currencies were trading mixed. The focus this week will be on a series of central bank policy decisions, including the U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday. The Fed is widely expected to keep rates unchanged with market participants focusing on future projections for policy rates alongside commentary from Chair Jerome Powell.

Our iconic market ‘will be GONE in months' thanks to huge shopping centre & new flats plan – it's a ghost town
Our iconic market ‘will be GONE in months' thanks to huge shopping centre & new flats plan – it's a ghost town

Scottish Sun

time21 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Our iconic market ‘will be GONE in months' thanks to huge shopping centre & new flats plan – it's a ghost town

DEATH KNELL Our iconic market 'will be GONE in months' thanks to huge shopping centre & new flats plan – it's a ghost town Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) AN ICONIC market could be gone in months as redevelopment plans go ahead amid crippling competition from a major shopping centre. Shepherd's Bush Market, in West London, dates back 111 years but its future is uncertain as developers plan to build 40 flats as part of a nine-storey complex, and new shops. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 10 Many traders worry they could be priced out, pushed aside, or left behind Credit: Paul Edwards 10 Others are worried the character of the market won't survive the changes Credit: Paul Edwards 10 Sue French, 60, who has worked at Ellis's Pet Store for 43 years, blames the decline on competition Credit: Paul Edwards Hammersmith and Fulham Council approved Yoo Capital's £5million proposal to regenerate the area in late 2023, leading to gentrification fears among traders. The housing development will be located on the Old Laundry Site land opposite the market and includes the demolition of an apparent former homeless hostel. The council will manage the homes, with the scheme to include the revamp of sections of the market space itself, leaving many traders worried they'll be ushered out. However, many say the death knell was already sounded back in 2008, when the gargantuan Westfield shopping centre first opened. The modern mall covers 2,600,000 sq ft and cost £1.6 billion, featuring high street giants like John Lewis, Marks & Spencer, Next and Primark - meaning footfall at the market has been declining for years. And that's to mention the rise of online shopping, with people preferring to shop at Amazon - which is also causing devastating problems for more established outlets, and was accelerated during the Covid pandemic. 'Growth and potential' For stallholders like Bobby Singhy, 45, whose family has been part of the market for over five decades, the place holds deep personal value. 'The market is wonderful, great characters, always here to help one another,' he told The Sun this week. 'There's a lot of growth and potential in this area. My stall has been here for 55 years—my grandad, then my dad, then me.' Others are worried the character of the market won't survive the changes. Wrecking machines move in to demolish 'ghost town' Scots estate dubbed 'Britain's Chernobyl' Sue French, 60, who has worked at Ellis's Pet Store for 43 years, blames the decline on competition. 'The market has changed a lot over the years," she said. "This used to be busy but when they made Westfield that killed us." 'At the moment, Yoo Capital are trying to fix it.' Traders say footfall has plummeted in recent years. 'I've seen lots and lots of people just walk past the market,' said Sue. 'The bus doesn't even stop near the market. People can't afford to rent stalls here… they're here for a few months and leave. "This is the only original part of Shepherd's Market that is left.' This used to be busy but when they made Westfield that killed us. Sue French Joanna Lee, 58, a lifelong local, fears that too much is being lost to development and that the market's unique character is under threat. 'They can't build over this — you can't take away this market… I believe we're witnessing the death of the market,' she said. 'I've grown up on this market and I don't want it to change because that's how it starts. "This used to be the place to go. There were lots and lots of shops all selling different things, and now the stalls are one by one packing up and closing." 'Now it doesn't matter' One jewellery stall worker, who has been at the market for 40 years, but asked not to be named, fears promises won't be kept. 'The market is very quiet – in the old days, weekends were packed - but now it doesn't matter,' she said. 'Yoo Capital said they won't gentrify and will regenerate it instead… I'm not worried as long as it's not gentrified.' 10 Market trader Bobby Singhy, 45, operates a stall previously occupied by his grandad and dad Credit: Paul Edwards 10 Abdul Idris, 60, believe the area needs a change Credit: Paul Edwards 10 Tony Lucky, 67, said online shopping and parking price rises are killing the market Credit: Paul Edwards The developers' deal struck with the council will see new homes and shops at one end, and investment in the rest of the market space. But not everyone is convinced it will be a good thing. 'There's a danger of Shepherd's Bush Market becoming gentrified like Brixton Market. There's been a lot of changes over the years,' said the unnamed local. 'This market is so multicultural and has a lot of life. "We have a wave of Asians, Afghans, Arabs and any changes may put people off from entering. "And that includes any major changes Yoo Capital makes." Online has defeated us and people going straight to Amazon and ordering from China. There's no parking and that's been the most challenging thing – it's acting like a deterrent to a lot of customers. Tony Lucky Tony Lucky, 67, owner of ZamZam Luggage, blames high parking charges and online competition. 'Online has defeated us and people going straight to Amazon and ordering from China,' he said. 'There's no parking and that's been the most challenging thing – it's acting like a deterrent to a lot of customers. Every hour it costs £5 or you get a parking fine of £80. 'Yoo Capital want to build more flats and don't care about the market,' he said. 'This market has been here 100 years and no problem – but now they want to break all this and rebuild the flats.' 'We need a change, but the right one' Abdul Idris, 60, has worked at his home goods stall since childhood. 'Tesco and other big stuff have been taking the spotlight away from shops in the market,' he said. 'We need a change of things. Development is happening but I don't know when – we need a change, but the right one.' For many, there's still hope. Laura Sakstein, 67, who runs 'This is Nuts', a family-run store her father opened in 1933, believes the market has life left in it. 'Back in the day it was packed – you couldn't get in the market,' she said. 'It's not just Shepherd's Bush, it's retail everywhere today.' 'Walthamstow used to be a fabulous market but I don't think it is what it was. "It's got potential, this place, but we need new variety,' she said. 'Community spirit is what it's all about. Westfield shouldn't be competition to the market. Retail everywhere is suffering.' According to Yoo Capital, the redevelopment is meant to protect the market's future. Redevelopment plan A 9-storey commercial building will be built on the Old Laundry Site next to the market, with 40 council-managed homes and upgrades to existing stalls. A spokesperson for Yoo Capital stated: 'Our commitment to the Market remains as strong as when we acquired the site in 2020. "Following the granting of full planning permission at the end of 2024, we have been hard at work, formulating the most cohesive plan for construction. "This allows us to not only look forward to the best final result – where traders can enjoy an upgraded market that better supports their needs – but also considers the effect of construction, minimising disruption to trade and ensuring the Market remains open throughout, as it has done for the past 111 years.' Louise Page-Jennings, a spokesperson for Yoo Capital, also shared with The Sun: 'We are carefully curating the Market and will introduce new tenants through the Market Academy during the construction process.' The Academy will offer free training to traders on merchandising, marketing, and business skills. She added, 'The Market will remain open throughout the works, with efforts in place to minimize any disruption.' Ms Page-Jennings said traders will be offered support worth over £5 million, including rent-free options during construction, sabbaticals, or lease buyouts. Those choosing to stay can access compensation of £7,500 to £12,500, plus up to £50,000 in profit-loss support, she added. A minimum of £7,500 financial support for traders that wish to open during construction. And no rent or service charge during Market construction Traders on sabbatical may receive up to £3,000 a month in payments and get brand new units or funds to upgrade existing ones. Rents will be fixed for five years after construction ends — but the market will eventually be opened to private buyers. Critics say that leaves uncertainty about what happens next. Paul Bardini, 69, whose grandfather first worked in the market in 1919, sees the other side. 'The investment could give the market a face-lift and bring in new customers,' he said. As traders wait and watch, hope hangs in the air — alongside fears of losing something irreplaceable. The Sun has contacted Westfield and Hammersmith and Fulham Council for comment. Do you know more? Email 10 Laura Sakstein, 67, is remaining positive and believes the market still has a place in today's world Credit: Paul Edwards 10 The market first opened 111 years ago Credit: Paul Edwards 10 Westfield shopping centre in Shepherds Bush opened in 2008 Credit: The Sun

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store