THE INTERNETOpenAI weighs drastic token price cuts to fight Anthropic for users.BIG AIThe day's dominant policy axis is a widening split between state and federal AI rules: Florida's Ron DeSantis publicly rejected a…GLOBAL MARKETSThe war premium unwound for the second time in a week — and faster than it built.LUXURY SEAIndia is opening two duty-cutting tracks at once.THE INTERNETChina's grip on indium phosphide exports threatens the global AI data-center rollout.BIG AITwo frontier-lab safety stories ran in opposite directions on the same day: Anthropic apologized for and reversed a hidden Claude…GLOBAL MARKETSEquities are pricing peace while the inflation data is pricing stagflation.LUXURY SEAThailand's inbound engine is running into an energy ceiling.THE INTERNETVisa unveils AI and stablecoin tools for agentic commerce.BIG AI'Bad policy and even worse politics': DeSantis spurns potential White House AI preemptionGLOBAL MARKETSARK's Cathie Wood said the market misread the latest jobs report and that labor softness argues for Fed easing, not tightening.LUXURY SEAWealthy buyers from Delhi, Kolkata and Bengaluru are driving demand for Mumbai's ₹25-crore-plus luxury homes.THE INTERNETAmazon Bedrock adds AI-agent payment capabilities through Coinbase and Stripe.BIG AISacramento's AI question: protect jobs or soften the blow?GLOBAL MARKETSFormer Kansas City Fed president Thomas Hoenig said the Fed should hike because policy is "too stimulative" against resurgent…LUXURY SEAThe Tourism Authority of Thailand forecasts 33 million foreign arrivals this year even as oil costs weigh on travel, while a fuel…
← All Beats
Beat · Luxury SEA · Weekdays

Luxury SEA

Luxury retail across Southeast Asia, India, and Australia.

Subscribe →Latest edition: 12 Jun 2026 · 250+ sources

Latest edition · 12 Jun 2026
Preview

Analysis

  • India is opening two duty-cutting tracks at once. Commerce minister Piyush Goyal travels to Switzerland next week to push the India–EFTA pact into force, lowering duty on Swiss watches, while India–UK FTA talks are reported as progressing on UK fashion, whisky and premium autos. The tailwind lands just as wealth concentrates — buyers from Delhi, Kolkata and Bengaluru are bidding up Mumbai's ₹25-crore-plus luxury homes. Demand base and landed cost are improving together in the region's fastest-growing affluent market, firming unit economics on imported hard luxury.
  • Thailand's inbound engine is running into an energy ceiling. The Tourism Authority of Thailand still forecasts 33 million foreign arrivals this year but explicitly flags oil costs as a drag, and the same fuel crisis is forcing Thai Airways, Thai Lion Air and Thai AirAsia to cut flights — capacity contraction that caps the luxury catchment travel retail depends on. Shashi Tharoor's reminder that Thailand drew 35.5 million visitors in 2024 against India's 9.95 million underlines how much regional spend concentrates in Bangkok. The read for demand planners: hold Thai travel-retail and hospitality exposure until fuel and capacity clear.
  • At the macro top, discretionary tailwinds are thinning. The RBA is expected to hold on June 16 with rate-cut calls intensifying amid a domestic slowdown — a dovish path that softens the Australian dollar and trims Australian outbound luxury wallets. It sits against a World Bank backdrop of 2.5% global growth, the weakest since the pandemic and downgraded across two-thirds of economies. The divergence is the signal: landed-cost and wealth momentum favour India and SEA gateways near-term, while AUD-linked demand and the broader global consumer face a softer backdrop.

Industry

  • INWealthy buyers from Delhi, Kolkata and Bengaluru are driving demand for Mumbai's ₹25-crore-plus luxury homes. Cross-city affluent purchasers are concentrating capital in Mumbai's top-end residential market, Hindustan Times reported. [Hindustan Times]

Tourism

  • THThe Tourism Authority of Thailand forecasts 33 million foreign arrivals this year even as oil costs weigh on travel, while a fuel crisis forces Thai Airways, Thai Lion Air and Thai AirAsia to cut flights. TAT framed energy prices as a drag on the outlook, and the three carriers trimmed schedules in response to the fuel squeeze, The Nation Thailand and The Star reported. [The Nation Thailand] [The Star]
  • INTHThailand remains cheaper for tourists than India despite India's higher per-capita income, Congress MP Shashi Tharoor said, calling for tourism-sector reforms. Tharoor cited India's 9.95 million foreign tourists in 2024 against Thailand's 35.5 million, and argued the private sector should lead India's tourism promotion, NDTV reported. [NDTV]

Free · No account · Unsubscribe by reply

Subscribe to read editions in full.

What this beat watches
Sections in each issue
Highlights
Demand
Brand
Macro
Travel retail
Audience
For luxury-group regional desks and retail strategy teams.
Delivery
Weekdays
Launching soon
250+ sources
Magic-link sign-in

Get Luxury SEA in your inbox.

Weighed, sourced, delta-only — before the day starts.

Subscribe →
Beats Starter · cancel anytime · magic-link sign-in