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International visitation to US up 13% in March 2007
Monday, June 25, 2007
3.9 million international visitors traveled to the United States in March 2007, an increase of 13 percent over March 2006 as the U.S. Department of Commerce announced. Total visitation in the first quarter 2007 was up 9 percent from the first quarter 2006. International visitors also spent $9.6 billion during the month, up 11 percent over March 2006.

March data may have benefited slightly from the positioning of the Easter holidays this year, April 8, 2007 vs. April 16, 2006. In other words, some early holiday inbound traffic may have moved in latter March this year. Nonetheless, March 2007 arrivals were four percent above March 2005 during which Easter occurred.

Highlights of March 2007 International Arrivals to the United States

All three regions have posted double-digit increases in arrivals for the first quarter of 2007.

Top Ports

Arrivals to the USA by port-of-entry are tracked on a monthly basis. The Department of Commerce has arrival data on more than 40 U.S. ports-of-entry from all world regions and 30 countries. A brief analysis is presented on the top 15 ports for overseas arrivals during 2007.

Overseas arrivals (which excludes Canada and Mexico) were up 8 percent through March 2007. Arrivals through the top 15 ports-of-entry accounted for 86 percent of all overseas arrivals and were down over one percentage-point from the top 15 in 2006. This indicates increased use of secondary ports.

Eleven of the top fifteen ports posted increases in arrivals for the first three months of 2007. New York posted a 14 percent increase in arrivals keeping ahead of Miami, which increased 10 percent. Arrivals through Newark were up 22 percent moving it into 5th position, ahead of Agana, Guam, which dropped two percent from last year.
Theodore Koumelis - Monday, June 25, 2007
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How do you expect luxury travel to perform in times of economic downturn?.

Providers of luxury travel products are going to witness shorter stays by their customers and an increase in seasonality.

People are going to become more value conscious and will opt for those luxury offers that represent a convincing value-for-money proposition. Providers of overpriced services are those to feel the pinch.

Both people paying for their personal trips and firms paying for their top executives' business trips will cut back on travel expenses, thus affecting all luxury travel providers.

It is going to be business as usual. Those people opting for high-end travel products are not going to be affected by the looming crisis.

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