Title: Reality Check
1Reality Check
2- Moderator Carol Ann Salcito, President,
Management Alternatives, Inc. - Presenters
- Maria Chevalier, Vice President, Hotels, BCD
Travel - Jan Freitag, Vice President, Smith Travel
Research Jan Freitag, Vice President, Smith
Travel Research - Brad Penrith, Senior Director, National Sales,
Carlson Hotels Worldwide
3US LODGING INDUSTRY OVERVIEW - Where are Room
Rates Going? -
Jan D. FreitagVice PresidentSMITH TRAVEL
RESEARCH
4U.S. Lodging Industry - Key StatisticsMay 2006
YTD
- Change
- Hotels 48,837 0.3
- Rooms 4.5mm 0.4
- Demand 2.7mm 2.7
- Occupancy 62.0 2.3
- A.D.R. 96.42 6.6
- RevPAR 59.79 9.0
- Room Revenue 40.0B 9.4
5Total United StatesADR Percent Change2002
2007P
6Total United StatesNominal Room Rates2000
2006P
If Yr. 2000 ADR Had Inflated at 3 over 6 years
US Hotel Rooms Are Still a Bargain
7Reality Check
- Brad Penrith
- Senior Director, National Sales, Carlson Hotels
Worldwide
8Macroeconomics Affecting The Industry
Revenue levels will be higher in absolute terms
than in previous years (1) however, the growth
will be slower (5)
Issues Trends
Expected Outcome
- Supply growth is benign while demand is
accelerating and changing - Rising construction costs due to interest rates,
availability of materials, increase competition
for sites and the cost of land, and detrimental
weather phenomenon like hurricanes - Increasing energy, insurance and labor costs
- Amenity creep including Bed Wars, new
televisions, internet, office away from office,
co-branding and change of ownership/flags - Demand erosion from emergence of alternatives
like condo hotels, cruises, time shares, friends
relatives, and experience travel - Transportation problems stemming from airline
industry challenges, rising fuel costs and
lacking infrastructure in certain geographies - Emerging global threats like pandemic illness,
terrorism, currency fluctuations and wars
- Higher revenues
- Cap on supply growth
- Higher operating costs
- Higher operating and/or capital expenses
- Slower revenue growth
- Inhibited demand
- Any/All of the above
Source PWC Forecast, March 2006
9U.S. Lodging Industry Growth by Segment
- 2003 was the valley for most segments with a
rebound beginning in 2004 - Midscale w/o FB RevPAR overtook Midscale w/ FB
segment in 2002 and is projected to widen that
lead over time to almost a 10 RevPAR
differential by 2008 - Luxury segment is projected to grow the fastest
over the next 3 years with a CAGR of 5.1,
followed second by the Midscale w/o FB. The
slowest growing segment is Midscale w/ FB, which
is forecast to grow by only 2.9.
Projected Nominal RevPAR YOY Growth (2006-2008)
Nominal RevPAR (2001-2008)
Source STR, PWC
10Contribution of Occupancy and ADR to Yearly RevPAR
ADR will register robust growth in 2007 - 2008
and RevPAR increases will continue to be driven
by ADR
Sources PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (2004 to
2006), Smith Travel Research (2000 to 2003)
11Reality Check
- Maria Chevalier
- Vice President, Hotels
- BCD Travel
12Global Hotel Market Predictions
13Hotel Negotiations Trends
- 50 hotels spend unmanaged
- All major chains looking for substantial rate
increases - Reduction in of corporate client accounts at
individual hotels - Qualifying room night volume thresholds raised
- Increased number of hotels declining to
participate in RFP - LRA is a premium rate NLRA increasingly offered
for low volume - Dynamic pricing introduced into 2006 season
- New Considerations
- E Folio
- Non-Smoking Chains
- Technology
14What is the Best Deal?
Strategy Observations
Benchmark
Relationships
International Leverage
Big Picture, Market Specific
Transition Agreement