KEY POINTS
  • Over the weekend, gyms in Beijing were forced to close again, adding pressure to an industry that's already seen the collapse of thousands of fitness businesses nationwide amid the outbreak.
  • China's ballooning fitness industry got hit so hard by the coronavirus that more businesses in the field closed in the first three months of the year than in all of 2015, according to Qichacha, which runs a Chinese business information database.
  • As the coronavirus kept gyms closed and people inside, online fitness app Keep has climbed to the top of its category in the Apple app store in China

Gyms in China's capital city of Beijing were forced to close again over the weekend, adding pressure to an industry that's already seen the collapse of thousands of fitness businesses nationwide.

The coronavirus, which emerged late last year in the Chinese city of Wuhan, has swept across the country and only started slowing down in early March. That allowed some fitness centers — which have essentially shut down since late January — to re-open in the last few weeks. But a new case of Covid-19 in Beijing last week increased concerns about a resurgence of the virus, turning a major business and residential district into the highest-risk region in the country.