
Gem Welcomes Back 4.4M Tourists as Cleanup Races Peak Season—But Rivers Rise Again
HOI AN, November 01 (Vietnam Insider) – Vietnam’s lantern-lit jewel, Hoi An, is luring back global travelers just days after record floods killed 35, submerged 16,000 homes, and wiped out crops across 5,300 hectares—signaling Asia’s tourism engine can restart faster than climate risks escalate.
The ancient UNESCO town, where foreign visitors drove 63% of central Vietnam’s income last year with 3.6 million arrivals, saw riverfront strolls resume Saturday as families scrubbed centuries-old wooden shophouses and hotels raced to reopen before December’s high season. Small merchants already tally losses in the thousands of U.S. dollars per shop, yet the swift pivot underscores a $200 billion Southeast Asian travel market that refuses to stay offline.
Nearby Thua Thien Hue Citadel reopened Friday, proving heritage sites can absorb climate shocks and still anchor regional GDP. Vietnam’s storm season, June to October, routinely ravages infrastructure, but Hoi An’s rebound mirrors Phuket’s post-2004 tsunami surge and Venice’s acqua alta recoveries—each time drawing investors betting on resilient demand.
Authorities warn swollen rivers could flood again within days, with 75,000 residents still dark and five missing. No aggregate damage figure exists, yet the episode exposes a broader truth: emerging-market destinations now treat extreme weather as a quarterly earnings event, not a knockout blow.
Savvy allocators are quietly pricing “flood-proof” revenue streams—think elevated bookings platforms and parametric insurance—into Asia’s post-COVID travel boom. The contrarian play: buy the dip in Vietnamese hospitality stocks before Hoi An’s lanterns flicker back to full glow and the next storm hits the headlines.
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Source: Vietnam Insider

