Recent Singapore articles
Consumers around the world are changing the way they spend their money given the difficult and uncertain economic conditions. In Singapore, one way people are adjusting is by eating at home more frequently, according to new research from Nielsen. The result: the average Singapore home is spending more on fresh food, groceries and household items than in recent years, creating opportunities for retailers and manufacturers who know how to effectively leverage this new behavior.
The average household has increased overall spending in these categories by 14 percent, with fresh food spend …
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines all recorded sound growth in ad spending in 2008 despite the global economic downturn. Meanwhile, ad spending in Thailand dropped 3 percent during the year as political instability took a toll.
INDONESIA
Leading the group was Indonesia, where ad spending increased 19 percent in 2008 over the previous year, and all four quarter showed growth.
Media Outlet
2008 (US$000s)
2007 (US$000s)
% Change
TV
2,868,654
2,522,678
14%
Newspapers
1,499,080
1,165,809
29%
Magazines
182,731
149,715
22%
TOTAL
4,550,465
3,838,202
19%
Source: Nielsen AIS
The top 10 ad spending categories combined represent 77 percent of all main media spending in Indonesia. The office equipment/computers/communications category led spending …
[read more]Chinese are more likely to travel this week for the National Day Golden Week holiday than they were earlier this year during the Chinese New Year holiday, Nielsen reported Tuesday.
According to a survey conducted by Nielsen, six in 10 Chinese plan to travel between September 29 and October 5 for Golden Week, while just 42% of Chinese reported making plans to travel this past February for Chinese New Year celebrations.
Boosted by their country’s booming economy and armed with growing disposable incomes, Indians are increasingly venturing abroad for leisure and business travel.
According to the Nielsen India Outbound Travel Monitor 2008, most international travelers from India are well-educated urbanites. Countries in Asia — Singapore (24% of Indians), Dubai, Australia, and Malaysia (17% of Indians, respectively) — are the most popular destinations for India’s new travel elite.
Overall, Asian destinations account for 72% of international leisure trips and 63% of business trips originating in India, Nielsen reported. In comparison, travel to Europe accounts for just …




