Airbnb booking data from China offers glimpse of a
rebound
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[April 25, 2020] By
Jane Lanhee Lee
(Reuters) - While the coronavirus pandemic
has frozen global travel and hit the travel industry hard, data from
home-sharing startup Airbnb Inc shows the number of domestic bookings in
China for the first half of April were up more than 200% compared with
the same period in March.
Data from AirDNA, a separate analytics firm, showed the number of
bookings for the week of April 13 in 10 big Chinese cities, including
Shanghai and Guangzhou, were up nearly 80% from the week of March 16,
which AirDNA Chief Executive Scott Shatford said was the bottom for that
market. Still that's about half the bookings seen the week of Jan. 6.
Shatford said his firm’s data includes bookings from international
travelers staying in China.
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AirDNA data also show the daily average rate in China from May onward is
similar to what it was in 2019. Shatford said Airbnb owners do not offer
big discounts online to lure travelers the way hotels might.
China is an important market for Airbnb, and the country’s recovery from
the coronavirus outbreak is being closely watched as an indication on
how other countries now reeling from the virus and related shutdowns may
fare.
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Small toy figures are seen in front of diplayed Airbnb logo in this
illustration taken March 19, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
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Airbnb earlier this month secured $2 billion in credit in two different deals.
One included warrants that can be exercised at a price that would equate with an
$18 billion valuation — well below the $31 billion valuation seen in Airbnb's
2017 Series F fundraising round.
“After we're given the 'all clear' and you're ready to venture out of your home
and into other cities, where are you going to want to stay?" said Paul Maguire,
managing partner at Iron Edge VC, whose fund owns Airbnb and is looking to buy
more on the secondary market. "You'd be more likely to opt for a short-term
house rental than checking into a big Marriott filled with hundreds of
strangers.”
(Reporting by Jane Lanhee Lee; editing by Greg Mitchell and Leslie Adler)
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