Showing posts with label up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label up. Show all posts

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Tourist attractions in Singapore gearing up for 2010


SINGAPORE : Tourist attractions in Singapore are pulling out all the stops to draw in visitors this festive season.

And they are not stopping there. Many of them said visitors can expect more promotions and events in 2010. For example, visitors can feed flamingos at the Jurong Bird Park, as part of the attraction's Latin Fiesta-themed year-end celebrations.

Its sister attractions, the Night Safari and the Singapore Zoo, are also planning similar activities, including appearances by Wild Tarzan Santa and an elephant showcase.

Meanwhile, Sentosa is hosting a range of family-friendly activities, including sand sculpting, playing of percussions and puppet storytelling. And they are not the only ones hoping to cash in on the tourist dollar this festive period.

Wendy Leong, general manager, City Tours, said: "We have the Christmas light-up tour. In the past, we did it just for 40 minutes, so that is why with the three-hour tour this year, we have an increase in the number of tourists coming into Singapore to join up with us."

Others are hoping the opening of the two integrated resorts will help boost business by helping to attract tourists here.

Patsy Ong, managing director, Adval Brand Group, said: "We are pretty much affected by the global economic crisis - we have seen a 25 per cent drop in visitorship, largely from the corporates and from overseas visitors... We are optimistic about it, but we are (also) cautious."

Between April and November 2009, Sentosa saw an increase in visitorship as compared to the same period last year. And it expects visitorship to the island to more than double to 15 million to 20 million over the next few years when Resorts World opens.

While some operators remain unsure about what the year ahead will bring, most are already gearing up for 2010, with new packages, promotions and new attractions ready to draw in the tourists.

Noel Hawkes, vice president, Resort Operations, Resorts World Sentosa, said: "We are going to open with a bang. It is going to be 20 attractions within Universal Studios, which includes the fabulous duelling roller coaster, the Madagascar, Revenge of the Mummy... Jurassic Park and many, many more.

"Of course, (there are also) the retail options and F&B. Four hotels... we have got Hotel Michael, Crockfords Tower, Festive Hotel and Hard Rock. Plus we have got the casino and that is going to occupy 150,000 square feet and it is really beautiful; it has got a lot of restaurants in there. We have got a mass gaming floor, plus the VIP gaming area on the second level."

The Singapore Tourism Board said it is hopeful that tourists arrivals in 2010 will surpass the 9 million to 9.5 million visitors expected this year. - CNA/ms


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Saturday, November 28, 2009

Sizing up Singapore’s casino project


SINGAPORE, Nov 22 — Social scientist Derek da Cunha is a man so mindful of what he says publicly that one wonders why he thought to write a book on one of Singapore's most heated subjects — that is, the pros and cons of Singapore's two upcoming integrated resorts (IRs). Okay, casinos.

Then again, it may be because of his mindfulness that makes his book — titled “Singapore Places Its Bets” — a cracking good read on everything you ever cheered or feared about having the Marina Bay Sands (MBS) and Resorts World Sentosa (RWS) in your midst from next year.

Crafted cautiously, it is an elegant, balanced read chock-a- block with facts that speak for themselves. It is his second book, following his 1997 work, “The Price Of Victory: The 1997 Singapore General Election And Beyond”. He is now writing a few more books, including “The New Asian Aristocracy”.

That same mindfulness had da Cunha, 49, revising his book well into last month, so that he could include the latest analysts' reports on the IRs' prospects from, among others, financial conglomerates Citibank and CIMB.

Curiously, he noted, analysts in the past two months or so have underscored the importance of local gamblers in ensuring the success of MBS, which is owned by America's Las Vegas Sands (LVS), and RWS, which is owned by Genting Singapore, a spin-off of Malaysia's Genting group. This is at odds with the government's banking on foreign fat cats to sustain the IRs.

On April 18, 2005, the government announced that Singapore would have not one but two casinos — a U-turn from its long, utter anathema towards such gaming. This was 13 months after the government first floated the idea, and in his book, da Cunha puts such a sudden policy change down to what he calls the government's “Big Bang”, “all-or-nothing, feast-or-famine mindset”.

Before da Cunha struck out on his own as an independent scholar and sometime consultant in April 2006, he worked at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (Iseas) for 16 years.

Then, in late 2006, the alumnus of Cambridge University and the Australian National University hit upon the idea of writing a book to chronicle Singapore's many efforts in making itself over to stay relevant in increasingly uncertain times.

He went to work on the proposed book in earnest, but by December last year, found that 60 per cent of it was focused on the IRs. So he considered hiving that 60 per cent off into a separate book altogether, and after talks with his publisher Straits Times Press, he did exactly that.

There is, to be sure, plenty in the book to please and prickle the conscience of those in the pro- and anti-casino camps alike. For example, he discusses deeply how gambling-happy or simply bored folk here might easily become problem gamblers — because the IRs are just an MRT or bus ride away from their homes, unlike the casinos in Malaysia or far-flung locations like Macau, Las Vegas and Canada.

He is also rueful of the “nothing succeeds like excess” mindset of many young Singaporeans today, which he thinks is “quite a ruinous way to move forward”.

But why release the book now? Is he not trickling cold water on an endeavour that the republic can ill afford to fail?

As da Cunha shows in his book, with the two IRs, the Singapore Tourism Board hopes to treble tourism revenues from S$9.6 billion (RM23 billion) in 2004 to S$30 billion in 2015. This would also give back to Singapore a bigger share of the Asia-Pacific tourism market, which had declined from a high of 13.1 per cent in 1991 to a mere 5.8 per cent by 2004.

He said wryly: “If my book came out a year after the openings, people would say that is after-the-event wisdom, that my book doesn't add anything because they know what has happened.”

But while hindsight may be 20/20, might the IRs have a 50/50 chance of succeeding at best, seeing as millions of would-be gamblers around the world are out of jobs?

Not at all, he said. “I am very optimistic that the sheer novelty of the IRs will make them resounding successes.”

Thursday's news that Singapore is officially out of the recession has also added shine to the IRs' prospects.

The one thing he thinks might count against them is the growing perception that Singapore is a very expensive city to visit, the 10th priciest in the world this year by the Economist Intelligence Unit's reckoning.

He has two further worries about the IRs' impact.

The first is the assumption that many have — that casino gambling is punting by any other name. He shows in his book that punters actually bet, and so lose, more heavily at casino table games than they do on long-shot lotteries.

His other concern is just how frenziedly Genting and LVS will work to recoup their staggering investments — Genting, for one thing, has pumped S$6.59 billion into RWS at last check, and hopes to attract up to 13 million tourists in its first year.

“The question that arises,” he intones, “is whether the same objectives of generating greater tourist dollar receipts, giving a boost to the economy and also increasing job creation could have been achieved at almost a similar degree with two projects that cost less than half of what they do now.”

For example, he said, Wynn Resorts has only one casino in Macau but still manages to enjoy the third biggest slice of the revenue pie after casino magnate Stanley Ho's Sociedade de Jojos de Macau group and LVS, both of which have two or more casinos.

As for tackling the grit and sleaze typically part and parcel of the casino scene, he sees that as a work in progress and one that should be calibrated so as not to put punters off so much that they then shun the IRs.

Being a social scientist, he wondered, though: “Is it possible to ring-fence such vibrancy to purely the economic and social spheres, and not extend it to the political one?” — Straits Times


Source

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Tourists arrival up 4.4% despite flu and global downturn


KUALA LUMPUR: Tourists arrival to Malaysia has gone up by 4.4% in the first eight months of the year compared with the same period last year.

Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ng Yen Yen said this was despite the outbreak of the Influenza A(H1N1) and the global economic downturn.

From January to last month, the number of tourists to Malaysia increased to 15.38 million from 14.73 million during the same period last year.

In August alone, tourist arrivals rose by 10.4% to 2.03 million from 1.84 million last year.

“This is an encouraging figure,” said Dr Ng after launching the ministry’s 1Malaysia logo here yesterday.

“This shows that foreign visitors are visiting Malaysia although it is a challenging time now.”

She said tourists from China increased by 14.8% (104,473 people) in August alone, while visitors from Taiwan rose by 30.4% (26,032), Australia, 26.6% (42,969), Britain 16.5% (44.519) and the United States 1.4% (19,557).

Tourists from Singapore increased by 22% (1.09 million) and India by 1.3% (42,332), while visitors from Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea dropped by 5.2% (114,555), 9.9% (181,634) and 15.2% (23,305) respectively.

Dr Ng said tourists from Saudi Arabia and the UAE also decreased by 41.8% and 66.8% to 8,366 and 1,880 respectively due to the Ramadan month. But tourists from Iran increased by 47.9% to 9,470.

Although tourists from most of the popular countries increased, the occupancy rate at local hotels dropped by 3% from January to August compared with last year.

“The decrease shows that visitors are mostly staying with their friends or relatives as well as going for home stay,” Dr Ng said.

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