Forget casinos, Singapore’s Indian tourists are in for some cruising

A woman on board sunbathes atop the Royal Caribbean International's mega-ship, the Voyager of the Seas,  berthed at the Ohi wharf in Tokyo, Japan, on Saturday, September 14, 2012. Photographer: Yuriko Nakao/Bloomberg

Bloomberg

When Indian architect Rahul Maini and his parents embarked on their first trip abroad in May, Singapore was their destination of choice. But the trio wasn’t going for the hawker food or even the city-state’s casinos — they were there to get on a ship.
The equatorial island has become a flourishing entry point for Indian cruise-ship passengers, bolstering sales for operators, including Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. and Genting Hong Kong Ltd. About 100,000 Indians sailed from Singapore last year, 29 percent more than in 2015, making India the biggest market for cruises departing from the Southeast Asian nation, according to the Singapore Tourism Board.
“We chose to go on a cruise because we could visit three countries in one short trip,” said Maini, 26, whose four-day cruise on Royal Caribbean’s Voyager of the Seas took in the Malaysian city of Penang and the Thai island of Phuket. The family spent about $7,700, which Maini said was “expensive, but worth it.”
The expenditure is part of the 777.3 billion rupees ($12 billion) that Euromonitor International predicts middle-class Indians will shell out on overseas leisure travel this year. The market is expanding about 10 percent annually and will eclipse 1 trillion rupees by 2020, the research company says.
While the Middle East and France are the most-popular overseas destinations for Indians, Singapore is expected to register a 59 percent jump in arrivals from India between 2015 and 2020, according to Euromonitor. Among the city-state’s top 10 inbound passenger markets, India is the fastest-growing, according to Changi Airport Group, which manages Singapore’s international airport.
The number of arrivals from India increased 15 percent in the first five months of this year,
compared with a year earlier — outperforming China by 3 percentage points. Many of the tourists are like the Mainis, who come mainly to join a cruise.

Fly-Cruise Tourism
“Fly-cruise tourism has really taken off among Indian tourists,” said Chayadi Karim, a research associate with Euromonitor.
To help, the Singapore government created the Cruise Development Fund, which supports travel agents and event organisers trying to get people to sail from Singapore, said Annie Chang, a director at the tourism board.
The number of cruise passengers from India leaving via Singapore has been increasing by least 10 percent a year annually, said Michael Goh, senior vice president of international sales for Genting Cruise Lines.

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