logo
Australians in '$280 million Euro summer surge' — and emerging holiday hotspots

Australians in '$280 million Euro summer surge' — and emerging holiday hotspots

SBS Australiaa day ago
European summer spending is set for a rebound, one of Australia's biggest banks predicts, with travellers also looking to other destinations to escape the winter at home. ANZ says customers travelling to Europe across June, July, and August will spend up to $280 million — a projected 10 per cent increase compared to 2024 which it says is based on early trends in hotel and airline bookings. It says pre-travel spending data showed that between January and May, hotel and airline bookings were up 11 per cent on the same period last year. The projected total spend won't match the record of $313 million set in 2023, ANZ said. But it will be an uptick from 2024 where, despite more than 100,000 of its customers travelling to Europe, total spend and average spend per customer were down 19 per cent and 13 per cent respectively, compared to the previous year.
Beyond saying travel to Europe among its customers had "dipped" in 2024, ANZ in its statement did not explain why it believes there might be an increase in total spending this year — although not one that would match the 2023 record.
Some measures show consumer confidence — which predicts how consumers feel about the economy and their own finances — has improved since 2024. But it's also higher than in 2023. Interest rates , however, have fallen from the 12-year high which carried from late 2023 through 2024. That has eased mortgage repayments, though disposable incomes haven't significantly increased. Like Australia, Europe also battled a period of high inflation. Inflation in the European Union peaked at 11.5 per cent in late 2022 and has since cooled. Falling inflation doesn't necessarily equate to lower prices, it just means prices are growing at a slower rate — unless inflation turns negative. Additionally, a recent analysis showed that a drop in jet fuel prices had lowered airfares. Global capacity — meaning seats on planes — was also up on last year and pre-pandemic levels, contributing to falling costs, according to corporate travel advisors FCM Consulting. "Our data shows that customers are reigniting their passion for European travel. We're seeing strong growth in early planning activity," said Yiken Yang, ANZ's managing director of everyday banking.
"While we may not hit the $313 million peak of 2023, 2025 is shaping up as a vibrant resurgence for the travel sector."
ANZ said non-European destinations in 2024 saw a 3 per cent increase in spend for the June-August period. Indonesia, New Zealand, Thailand and Japan were among the most popular destinations, ANZ said, which is consistent with what the Australian Bureau of Statistics says are countries favoured by holidaymakers. It also said Hong Kong and Sri Lanka were "emerging hotspots" and recording "significant" year-on-year growth in spend.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young writes to PM for algae bloom disaster declaration
Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young writes to PM for algae bloom disaster declaration

News.com.au

time34 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young writes to PM for algae bloom disaster declaration

The Greens are demanding a national response to the rolling waves of toxic algae bloom washing up along South Australia's coastline, calling on Anthony Albanese to declare the event a national disaster. On Monday, Greens senator Sarah Hanson Young, from South Australia, said she had written to the Prime Minister for more support to address the unfolding environmental catastrophe, which has killed and polluted marine wildlife and produced discoloured water and foam along vast stretches of the state. 'For months, the coastline in South Australia has been under attack by a toxic algal bloom,' she said. 'So far, most of the response has been led by the local community without any formal government support. 'I have written to the Prime Minister because South Australians cannot be left to deal with this environmental disaster on our own. 'If there were dead fish washing up on Bondi Beach every day, there would be a national outcry and response. 'South Australians deserve the same support from our federal government that east coast states would demand.' The toxic bloom was likely caused by three interconnected factors, the South Australian Department for Environment and Water said. First, a marine heatwave, starting in September 2024, has warmed sea temperatures about 2.5C more than normal. Second, the 2022-23 River Murray floods washed extra nutrients into the sea, and third, a cold water upwelling in the summer of 2023-24 pulled nutrient-rich water to the surface. The bloom could last for months, the department warned. It does not produce long-term harm to humans, though it can cause short-term skin or eye irritation, but it is having a devastating economic impact on the state's $500m fisheries industry. Senator Hanson-Young wants state and federal inquiries into the phenomenon and a federal support package to alleviate losses. 'Our tourism industry is already reporting mass cancellations because of people deciding not to travel and stay on the South Australian coast,' she said. 'Our industries are being crippled by this climate crisis. They need support from the government and they need it now.' Senator Hanson-Young also took aim at the 'fossil fuel industry' and argued it was responsible for the bloom. 'The climate crisis is here and it is here before our very eyes and it is creating an environmental catastrophe,' she said. 'What we need is to stop making the problem worse and to start investing in mitigation and adaptation strategies. 'Sitting on our hands and hoping it will all just wash away is not realistic. 'That's why we need a federal and state push for an inquiry … and we need to make sure there is support for industry who are going to have to struggle while this bloom sticks around.' The Coalition has flagged its support for a parliamentary inquiry into the event.

Working for someone else made it hard to care for my daughter. So I quit
Working for someone else made it hard to care for my daughter. So I quit

ABC News

time39 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Working for someone else made it hard to care for my daughter. So I quit

Chasing a career in law was a surprise to Niti Prakash — and her family. "I come from an Indian family background, anyone who knows a lot of Indians knows there is always a push for engineering or being a doctor," says the 44-year-old from south-east Queensland. "But I was horrendous at maths … and really enjoyed legal studies." Eventually specialising in property law, Niti enjoyed the "boring document stuff". But having her daughter changed how she felt about the work she was doing. Niti's daughter was born with multiple disabilities, which has required a lot of her focus. "Working as a lawyer in private practice, you don't always get the understanding you need to take time to go to appointments. "I couldn't do a lot of things my other colleagues could, like attend evening networking events. "That was really tough." That inflexibility, along with her growing passion for the disability sector, is why Niti recently made the decision to leave law and her work in the disability sector, and focus full-time on her own independent disability consultancy. We spoke to Niti about a career change in her 40s, and what taking the leap into self-employment has been like, while also being the sole carer for her now tween daughter. These are her words. Every milestone with my daughter has had challenges. She is my everything and as a single parent, I have walked every step of this journey with her; navigating those complex systems, fighting for every inch of support. And learning firsthand how daunting the NDIS [National Disability Insurance Scheme] can be for families like mine ... juggling that with work hasn't been easy. My husband and I separated when our daughter was three. That separation threw my world, because I originally wanted to drop down to part-time work to manage all her appointments. Suddenly I had to maintain all the finances, so I went back to full-time work. COVID forced a lot of law firms to realise people can work from home, and they're not watching Jerry Springer. But back then things weren't as flexible. And medical specialists don't work according to your schedule — you take the appointment when it's on offer. I had to ask for a lot of unpaid leave to manage those. Even though no-one would tell you that is the reason they are annoyed, you just felt the heat: "Oh, she's taking another carer's day off." Do you have a unique job you often get questions about? We'd love to hear about it lifestyle@ I've been a lawyer forever and a day. I went from big firms, to small firms, to in-house and government. In one of my jobs I was working as property lawyer, and was advising on specialist disability accommodation. I felt really passionate about it because of my daughter, so I decided to see if I could step into the disability sector. I was successful getting a role in that space and on the side started my own consultancy. Just recently I've gone full-time with my business, and I've been loving it so far. At the start I felt sick about it. I had — and still have — imposter syndrome. And I do have fears about making enough money to make ends meet. I am keeping in the back of my mind that I may have to accept going back to employment part-time or full-time, but am giving it a few months and seeing what comes from that. One of the biggest shifts is I don't feel guilty anymore. No-one ever made me feel that way, but I always felt like I wasn't giving 100 per cent to my job. Just recently I took my daughter to get a new hearing aid, and it felt so freeing. I wasn't going to have to explain the situation to anyone. I just took her out of school early, and simply didn't answer any business calls during that time. This morning, I was able to make pancakes for my daughter, and she was so happy. That's one of the benefits of working for myself, I can do more things with her. That gives me a lot of joy.

Lunch Wrap: ASX seesaws into a slippery dip as markets await tariff pause deadline
Lunch Wrap: ASX seesaws into a slippery dip as markets await tariff pause deadline

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Lunch Wrap: ASX seesaws into a slippery dip as markets await tariff pause deadline

Utilities and healthcare stocks on the up Gold stocks dragging, down more than 2pc ASX All Tech adds 0.24pc ASX seesaws wildly ahead of tariff pause deadline The ASX wasn't quite sure which way to go earlier this morning, but as of about 1pm AEST it seems to have made up its mind, dipping by about 0.36% at the time of publishing. Jumping 10 points in the first five minutes, the ASX 200 dropped about the same before spiking back up again an hour later. It's been a choppy affair ever since, but at least the utilities sector is doing its best to stem too much blood. Looking at our large caps, market favourites Commonwealth Bank (ASX:CBA) and Northern Star Resources (ASX:NST) are trending lower, down 0.12% and 6.6% each. NST failed to meet its revised production guidance range for the Kalgoorlie production centre, offloading 842k ounces compared to guidance of 850-860k. The company managed to scrape just over the line for its total gold production guidance numbers, producing 1.643m ounces compared to estimates of 1.63-1.66, but the market was overall displeased with the update. Healthcare giant CSL (ASX:CSL) is moving in the opposite direction, adding 1.94% alongside a 1.85% jump for James Hardie Industries (ASX:JHX). Origin Energy (ASX:ORG) has also jumped more than 6% intraday, leading the greater utilities sector higher. 12 countries to receive 'take it or leave it' offers Twelve countries currently negotiating trade deals with the US Trump administration will soon receive letters offering a final deal from the White House. A pause on tariffs set to be imposed on the majority of US trading partners will expire on July 9, with most tariffs going into effect by August 1. "I signed some letters and they'll go out on Monday, probably twelve," Trump said, when asked about the trade negotiations. "Different amounts of money, different amounts of tariffs." While the Trump administration was initially very optimistic about establishing concrete trade deals with its major partners, the prez has since changed his tune, stating it was easier to send a letter. That tracks – most major trade deals take years to negotiate, so it was always going to be a tall order to come to dozens of agreements in a matter of months. Hotly anticipated deals with India and the EU appear to have fallen through at the last minute, leaving the door open for some big market upsets when the new tariffs finally come into effect. On Friday, Trump added more fuel to that fire, stating tariffs could range up to 70% compared to the 10% to 50% threatened in April. That said, investors aren't running for the hills as they were on Liberation Day. "The markets are discounting a return to tariff levels of 35%, 40% or higher, and anticipating an across-the-board level of 10% or so,' Boston-based Twinfocus chief investment officer John Pantekidis told Reuters. ASX SMALL CAP WINNERS Here are the best performing ASX small cap stocks for July 7 : Security Description Last % Volume MktCap VN8 Vonex Limited. 0.036 100% 2156808 $13,546,863 BMM Bayanminingandmin 0.06 71% 21465707 $3,603,439 EEL Enrg Elements Ltd 0.0015 50% 546851 $3,253,779 BPM BPM Minerals 0.043 48% 9538695 $2,531,709 ZMM Zimi Ltd 0.011 38% 495333 $3,420,351 GTR Gti Energy Ltd 0.004 33% 13565308 $8,996,849 FRB Firebird Metals 0.098 27% 1505249 $10,961,828 NWM Norwest Minerals 0.014 27% 4401658 $10,651,944 KPO Kalina Power Limited 0.0075 25% 2850600 $17,597,974 BIT Biotron Limited 0.0025 25% 1617648 $2,654,492 BUY Bounty Oil & Gas NL 0.0025 25% 297011 $3,122,944 MMR Mec Resources 0.005 25% 8400000 $7,399,063 SKK Stakk Limited 0.005 25% 102300 $8,300,319 SRZ Stellar Resources 0.02 25% 15750554 $33,276,009 TMK TMK Energy Limited 0.0025 25% 501642 $20,444,766 SCP Scalare Partners 0.13 24% 2500 $4,392,677 NH3 Nh3Cleanenergyltd 0.05 22% 3120545 $26,093,310 ALY Alchemy Resource Ltd 0.006 20% 45000 $5,890,381 WSR Westar Resources 0.006 20% 840301 $1,993,624 CMO Cosmometalslimited 0.02 18% 878586 $5,476,306 DRE Dreadnought Resources Ltd 0.0105 17% 4930863 $45,715,500 AON Apollo Minerals Ltd 0.007 17% 413000 $5,570,741 AS2 Askarimetalslimited 0.007 17% 1859773 $2,425,024 LML Lincoln Minerals 0.007 17% 1550000 $12,615,418 RRR Revolverresources 0.036 16% 114474 $8,564,502 In the news… Bayan Mining and Minerals (ASX:BMM) has staked 72 lode claims in the Mojave Desert of California in a bid to form the Desert Star rare earth project. It's a Tier 1 area for rare earth mineralisation, just 4.5km from the Mountain Pass REE Mine (supplied 15.8% of global rare earth production in 2020) and 4.7km from Dateline Resources' (ASX:DTR) Colosseum project, which has shown similar radio metric signatures for REE mineralisation to Mountain Pass. BMM will begin with a desktop review, field recon and rock chip sampling to drum up some early drilling targets. Back on Australian soil, BPM Minerals (ASX:BPM) is preparing to begin drilling at its newly acquired Forelands gold project in the Yilgarn Craton–Albany Fraser Orogen margin of WA. The project has already produced bonanza-grade hits up to 3m at 65.8 g/t gold from 25m of depth in drilling, and BPM reckons Foreland presents a near-term resource conversion opportunity. Tenement acquisition is a bit of a theme today – Westar Resources (ASX:WSR) is also moving higher after staking a new copper tenement application in the under-explored Birrindudu Basin of Northern Territory. The Northern Territory Geological Survey and CSIRO both found evidence of sedimentary copper deposits in a review of drill core from Birrindudu, highlighting the area as a potential frontier district for copper mineralisation. Finally, Dreadnought Resources (ASX:DRE) is launching a test work sampling program at the Mangaroon critical metal project after fielding growing commercial interest in the rare earth and critical mineral potential of the Gillford Creek prospect. Gillford Creek is prospective for a suite of rare earths as well as niobium, scandium, titanium, phosphorus and zirconium. DRE management stresses that this sampling program won't distract from its 'More gold, Faster' strategy, but will advance its critical metal commercialisation ambitions. ASX SMALL CAP LAGGARDS Here are the worst performing ASX small cap stocks for July 7 : Code Name Price % Change Volume Market Cap GMN Gold Mountain Ltd 0.002 -33% 7556216 $16,859,278 FAU First Au Ltd 0.003 -25% 1009478 $8,305,165 EXT Excite Technology 0.008 -20% 1136999 $20,726,419 GGE Grand Gulf Energy 0.002 -20% 750000 $7,051,062 HTG Harvest Tech Grp Ltd 0.015 -17% 773452 $16,362,330 PV1 Provaris Energy Ltd 0.015 -17% 613604 $12,564,023 ALM Alma Metals Ltd 0.005 -17% 1224333 $11,104,423 ARV Artemis Resources 0.005 -17% 156112 $15,214,033 MRD Mount Ridley Mines 0.0025 -17% 751500 $2,335,467 NES Nelson Resources. 0.0025 -17% 31999 $6,515,783 AVM Advance Metals Ltd 0.041 -16% 6485856 $12,986,707 AGY Argosy Minerals Ltd 0.029 -15% 13769095 $49,501,312 AKN Auking Mining Ltd 0.006 -14% 2943588 $4,023,451 AYT Austin Metals Ltd 0.003 -14% 104766 $5,544,670 LCL LCL Resources Ltd 0.006 -14% 95362 $8,394,800 SPX Spenda Limited 0.006 -14% 750000 $32,306,508 SFM Santa Fe Minerals 0.125 -14% 40492 $10,558,724 SVG Savannah Goldfields 0.02 -13% 630461 $26,256,272 AJX Alexium Int Group 0.007 -13% 39265 $12,691,429 AM5 Antares Metals 0.007 -13% 2163706 $4,118,823 ATS Australis Oil & Gas 0.007 -13% 20000 $10,544,500 GSM Golden State Mining 0.007 -13% 2000000 $2,234,965 RGL Riversgold 0.0035 -13% 875981 $6,734,850 BRU Buru Energy 0.023 -12% 1504129 $20,264,650 SPQ Superior Resources 0.004 -11% 490000 $10,669,422 IN CASE YOU MISSED IT Break it Down: MTM Critical Metals (ASX:MTM) is adding national security expert Gregory L. Bowman to the advisory board of US subsidiary Flash Metals USA. Indiana Resources (ASX:IDA) has leveraged results from geochemical sampling near the Minos project to identify new gold targets. Australia has a new globally focused deep tech company in MagnaTerra Technologies following the merger of mining innovator NextOre and explosives detection startup MRead. As the US starts to ramp up domestic antimony support, Nova Minerals' (ASX:NVA) Estelle Project in Alaska is shaping up as a strategic solution. StockTake: Anson Resources (ASX:ASN) has boosted its exploration prospects at the Green River lithium project in Utah.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store