China’s Trip.com faces revenue slowdown, warns of ‘significant fine’ from antitrust probe
Country’s top travel site signals turbulence ahead amid rising energy costs, geopolitical tensions and mounting regulatory pressure

The company reported on Thursday that first-quarter revenue rose 17 per cent to 16.2 billion yuan (US$2.4 billion), but forecast growth of 3 to 8 per cent in the second quarter, the weakest since late 2022.
Profit for the March quarter dropped almost 42 per cent to 2.5 billion yuan, the lowest since late 2024.
Trip.com, which operates the Ctrip and Qunar platforms in China, said the antitrust investigation, announced in January by the State Administration for Market Regulation, “could directly result in a significant fine, other financial penalties [or] changes to the company’s business practices”, which “may have a material adverse effect on the company’s consolidated financial position, results of operations, or cash flows”.

The company added it could not “predict the timing, outcome or consequences of the investigation, or estimate the possible loss”.