Trip.com's Q2 2025 Earnings Call Contradictions: Travel Recovery and AI Strategy Divergences
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: August 27, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: RMB 14.8B, up 16% YOY and 7% QOQ
- EPS: RMB 6.97 (USD 0.97) per ADS; non-GAAP RMB 7.20 (USD 1.01)
Business Commentary:
- Strong Inbound Travel Growth:
- Trip.com Group reported a
100%year-over-year increase in inbound travel bookings in Q2 2025. This growth was driven by strong demand from Korea and Southeast Asia, and the potential of China's underdeveloped inbound travel sector.
Financial Performance and Revenue Growth:
- The company's
net revenuein Q2 increased by16%year-over-year, with a7%increase from the previous quarter. This was supported by healthy demand across key markets and business segments, and contributed by strong inbound and international business growth.
AI and Content Integration:
- The integration of AI and content enhanced Trip.com's platform, delivering personalized recommendations and improving data processing efficiency.
This was achieved by leveraging large language models and a rich content ecosystem, which are key to Trip.com's strategic focus on AI-generated content.
Silver Generation Travel and Elderly Focus:
- The number of users in the Old Friends Club and their total GMV grew by over
100%since year-end 2024. This growth was driven by the rising engagement and purchasing power of the expanding and active senior travel demographic, who prefer thematic travel products.
International Expansion and Loyalty Program:
- International bookings on the Trip.com platform increased by over
60%year-over-year, with significant contributions from the APAC region. - Growth was supported by enhancements to the loyalty program, which strengthen user retention and create a flywheel effect for customer loyalty.
Sentiment Analysis:
- Net revenue rose 16% YOY (7% QOQ) to RMB 14.8B; adjusted EBITDA increased to RMB 4.9B from RMB 4.4B a year ago. International bookings grew over 60% YOY; inbound bookings rose over 100% YOY. Outbound hotel and air bookings exceeded 120% of 2019 levels. Management expressed optimism and announced a new USD 5B share repurchase program.
Q&A:
- Question from Alex C. Yao (JPMorgan): How will AI and content strategy evolve in coming years, and what’s new in Trip.Planner?
Response: AI-personalized content and robust backend data improve planning and loyalty; Trip.Planner now uses LLMs and platform data to create editable, highly personalized itineraries.
- Question from Lixin Ju (BofA Securities): What were summer booking trends and cross-border dynamics?
Response: Demand was resilient; domestic volumes strong despite ADR softness, outbound >120% of 2019 on the platform, foreign-to-foreign >60% YOY, and inbound to China >100% YOY on the platform.
- Question from Thomas Chong (Jefferies): How are hotel and air prices trending and outlook for the rest of the year?
Response: Domestic hotel and air face pricing pressure; hotel price declines narrowed to mid–low single digits; outbound air fares softening YOY but still above 2019; outbound hotel prices stable.
- Question from Dapeng Gong (Citi): What are you seeing in consumer sentiment amid macro uncertainty?
Response: Volumes are strong across domestic, outbound, and inbound with experiential demand, though ADR is slightly down.
- Question from Yang Liu (Morgan Stanley): Impact of Umetrip’s direct airline sales feature on your business?
Response: Market is large; Trip.com will compete by doubling down on service quality and globalization with 24/7 support.
- Question from Wei Xiong (UBS): How do you assess competition (e.g., JDJD-- entry) and business impact?
Response: They will avoid price wars and focus on superior service and comprehensive product breadth to sustain leadership.
- Question from Parash Jain (HSBC): Size and contribution outlook for Old Friends Club and travel-plus-entertainment?
Response: Silver-travel could exceed $1T in 3–5 years; senior demand is strong and flexible; event-led travel demand exceeds supply, so investment will continue.
- Question from Jiong Shao (Barclays): More insights on the inbound travel opportunity to China?
Response: China’s inbound was ~0.3% of GDP pre-COVID vs 1–5% elsewhere; with strong value proposition, promotion can unlock significant growth.
- Question from K. Y. Cheung (Goldman Sachs): Details on Trip.com international performance and long-term contribution?
Response: Trip.com bookings rose >60% YOY with APAC leading and Middle East early traction; inbound grows triple digits; loyalty upgrades improve retention.
- Question from Wei Fang (Mizuho): Update on Trip.com marketing in Q2 and plans for 2025?
Response: ROI-disciplined, app-first acquisition (app ~70% of global orders); dynamic budgeting; continue signature campaigns with disciplined spend.
- Question from Hyungwook Choi (Daiwa): How do aggressive competitor campaigns affect your H2 and 2026 marketing?
Response: APAC’s size/fragmentation supports growth despite competition; Trip.com will scale via one-stop offerings and localized, demand-driven marketing.
- Question from Qiuting Wang (CICC): Update on buybacks and the new USD 5B program?
Response: Repurchased ~7M ADRs, fully using this year’s quota; new multi-year $5B buyback aims to offset ESOP dilution and potentially reduce share count.



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