Trump uncertainty slowing U.S. travel
bookings: report
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[March 06, 2017]
BERLIN (Reuters) - Demand for travel
to the United States over the coming months has flattened out following
a positive start to the year, with uncertainty over a possible new
travel order likely deterring visitors, travel analysis company
ForwardKeys said on Monday.
ForwardKeys, which analyses 16 million flight reservations a day from
major global reservation systems, also said that travel from the United
States to and from the Middle East has been especially hard hit after
President Donald Trump's move to ban people from seven Muslim-majority
countries.
"Uncertainty reigns and the presidential rhetoric appears to be
deterring visitors to the U.S.," ForwardKeys founder Olivier Jager said
in a statement.
U.S. travel demand is set to be a topic at the world's largest travel
fair, the ITB, in Berlin this week.
After the travel ban was imposed in January, international travel to the
U.S. dropped by 6.5 percent in the following eight days, ForwardKeys
data showed last month.
In its latest update on Monday, ForwardKeys said bookings to the United
States recovered after the courts halted the ban, but dropped again in
the nine days after plans for a new ban were announced on Feb. 17.
Overall, bookings for travel to the United States over the next three
months are 0.4 percent down on last year, whereas they had been 3.4
percent ahead the day before the travel restrictions were imposed.
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A boatload of tourists stand on a boat as it departs from Battery
Park in New York August 27, 2015. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
The study also showed that accumulated U.S. bookings to the Middle
East were up by 12 percent on last year in the three weeks before
the ban. However, in the four weeks following the ban they were down
27 percent.
Emirates and Qatar Airways, two of the Middle East's biggest
airlines, declined to comment when asked about demand on U.S.
routes.
According to travel search site Kayak <PCLN.O>, searches from Europe
for flights to the U.S. are down by 12 percent since the elections.
However, Germans, some of the world's biggest spenders on travel,
have not been deterred, with searches up 10 percent in that period,
Kayak said in data provided to Reuters.
(Reporting by Victoria Bryan; additional reporting by Alexander
Cornwell in Dubai; editing by Alexander Smith)
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