Stock Markets April 7, 2026

China's Qing Ming Holiday Travel Grows Modestly as Spending Holds Steady

Morgan Stanley channel checks show higher passenger counts and mixed retail and entertainment results across the holiday period

By Marcus Reed
China's Qing Ming Holiday Travel Grows Modestly as Spending Holds Steady

Domestic travel in China rose 6.8% during the Qing Ming holiday from April 4 to 6, while tourism receipts climbed 6.6%. Per-passenger spending was unchanged year-over-year, Morgan Stanley reports, with cross-border travel and Hainan duty free sales showing stronger gains even as box office revenue fell.

Key Points

  • Domestic travel rose 6.8% during the Qing Ming holiday, with tourism revenue up 6.6% - sectors affected include transport and tourism services.
  • Per-passenger spending was unchanged year-over-year, indicating steady travel intent but restrained discretionary spending - relevant to retail, catering, and transport operators.
  • Cross-border travel and Hainan duty free showed stronger gains (cross-border travelers +9.1%; Hainan offline sales +15%, shoppers +20%), while box office receipts fell 19% - impacting duty free retailers and entertainment exhibitors differently.

Domestic travel in China recorded a 6.8% increase during the Qing Ming holiday spanning April 4 to 6, according to a Morgan Stanley report published Tuesday. Tourism revenue for the same period rose 6.6%, while average spending per passenger remained roughly flat compared with the prior year.

The investment bank said its channel checks and feedback from companies point to slower consumption in March across multiple categories, suggesting that outside of holiday periods consumers were exercising more caution and saving more. Morgan Stanley noted that while trends appear to be stabilizing, a broad-based recovery will take time and is expected to be uneven through 2026.

Cross-border travel outpaced domestic movement, with the average daily number of inbound and outbound travelers climbing 9.1% year-over-year over the holiday. Among key enterprise-level metrics, retail and catering sales rose 2.4% on a daily basis compared with last year.

Not all consumer-facing segments fared well. Box office revenue declined 19% year-over-year during the holiday window, highlighting a notable weakness in entertainment spending relative to other categories.

Hainan duty free shopping emerged as a bright spot. Morgan Stanley reported average daily offline sales there increased 15%, the count of shoppers grew 20%, and the number of items purchased rose 10% versus the previous year. These gains underline stronger performance in duty free retail compared with broader retail and entertainment measures during the period.

For firms and sectors that track passenger volumes and spending - including transport operators, retail and catering businesses, duty free operators, and entertainment exhibitors - the mixed results signal ongoing fragility outside peak travel days. The stable per-passenger spending metric suggests that while travelers continued to make trips, they did not materially increase discretionary expenditure per visit during the holiday.

Morgan Stanley explicitly cautioned that a full, broad-based rebound remains a longer-term prospect. The firm expects recovery patterns to be uneven over the course of 2026, reflecting the observed deceleration in consumption during non-holiday periods and the patchwork performance across travel, retail, and entertainment segments.


Data points cited in the report:

  • Domestic travel: +6.8% (Qing Ming holiday, April 4-6)
  • Tourism revenue: +6.6% (same period)
  • Per-passenger spending: flat year-over-year
  • Cross-border average daily travelers: +9.1% year-over-year
  • Retail and catering sales of key enterprises: +2.4% daily versus last year
  • Box office revenue: -19% year-over-year during the holiday
  • Hainan duty free offline: average daily sales +15%, shopper count +20%, items purchased +10% year-over-year

Risks

  • Consumption slowed in March across multiple categories, suggesting demand outside holidays may remain weak - this creates uncertainty for retail and catering revenue streams.
  • A broad-based recovery is not yet evident and is expected to be uneven through 2026, posing planning and capacity risks for transport and hospitality businesses.
  • Significant decline in box office revenue (-19%) highlights sector-specific weakness in entertainment that could weigh on firms dependent on ticket sales and related spending.

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