The Fast-Growing Experience Economy and The High Stakes of Luxury Adventures

The bucket list of the wealthy: Seeing the Titanic, traveling to space and walking on Mars. What else you gonna do with all that money? Recent events might have them thinking twice.
The missing OceanGate vessel has highlighted the dangers of seeking adventures on the fringe of the earth — but also the fast-growing experience economy.
Consumers want experiences, not things. A 2019 Momentum Worldwide survey showed that 76% of consumers would rather spend money on experiences — not material items — a 200% increase from 2012.
Luxury adventure-travel is a small but fast-growing market that has opened difficult-to-access parts of the world, per River Oaks Travel Concierge’s director of operations (WSJ).
Lindblad Expeditions (NASDAQ:LIND), a provider of adventure travel experiences, saw its 2022 revenue exceed pre-COVID levels by 23%. The company utilizes its partnership with National Geographic to provide unique travel experiences.
3.7K miles beneath the surface not enough? Try 50 miles above the ground.
Countdown to space: Remember meme stock Virgin Galactic (NYSE:SPCE)? Richard Branson’s space tourism company’s first flight is scheduled to launch between June 27 and 30 — followed by monthly trips. Nearly 800 people have signed up, some at the initial ticket price of $200K — but buying a ticket now will cost you $450K.
Question for Elon: What’s the ETA on Tourism Mars travel?