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Duty-free shops' sales to foreign customers rise in May

South Korean duty-free shops saw sales to foreign customers increase for the first time in three months in May, industry data showed Tuesday, a sign that Beijing's trip restrictions may be wearing off.

The sales to foreigners at local duty-free shops reached $655.9 million last month, up a solid 11.1 percent from the previous month, where they stood at $590 million, according to the data from the Korea Duty Free Shops Association.

The on-month increase marks the first rebound following a big drop in the number as the Chinese government exerted pressure on the country's travel agencies to stop selling package tours to South Korea in an apparent retaliation over the deployment of a US missile system on the Korean Peninsula. 

In this file photo taken Aug. 1, 2016, a Seoul department store is bustling with foreign tourists. (Yonhap)
In this file photo taken Aug. 1, 2016, a Seoul department store is bustling with foreign tourists. (Yonhap)

Beijing's ban dealt a blow to the local duty-free industry, which has heavily relied on Chinese demand. Chinese tourists accounted for 46.8 percent of all tourists coming to South Korea last year.

The latest tally showed that while South Korean nationals bought less at duty-free shops in May, a rise in demand by foreigners pushed up total sales 4.8 percent on-month to $937 million. This is also the first overall increase in three months.

The association added the number of foreign customers who visited shops in the country increased 2.6 percent on-month to 1.02 million from 998,000 in April. The rise is the first upward trend in four months, data showed. (Yonhap)

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