Title: John Dale
1Industry Outlook
- John Dale
- Senior Vice President
- BCD Travel Americas
Chicago BTA First Quarter Chapter Meeting
March 18, 2009
2Agenda
World Economy/US
Airlines and Hotels
Effects
Outlook
3Economic indicators from around the globe
Outlook for 2009 is Bleak and Gloomy
- Global GDP slowed to an estimated 2 growth in
2008. - Unemployment is growing and expected to continue
rising. - Retail sales continue to fall.
- Business and consumer confidence is faltering.
- The travel industry is feeling the effects.
Source IHG Jan 09
4Forecasts for GDP growth
5Real U.S. GDP
According to NBER, the U.S. officially entered a
recession in December 2007
Percent Change from Previous Quarter at
Annualized Rate
Source IHG / Blue Chip Economic Indicators,
January 2009
6Global unemployment situation
Source IHG / US Bureau of Labor Statistics
Dismal Scientist Statistics Canada
7Global retail sales
Most major economies show sales reflecting loss
in consumer confidence
Change over Prior Year
Mexico data from Oct 08 vs. Oct 07
Source IHG / Moodys Economy.com
8Global business confidence
Business confidence has fallen, with recent signs
of improvement
Source IHG/Moodys Economy.com
9Global consumer confidence
Global consumer confidence is reaching new lows
Source IHG / Moodys Economy.com
10Recession or Depression?
Its a recession when your neighbor loses his
job
Its a depression when you lose yours.
-- Harry Truman, 1958
- Economists do not agree on a textbook definition
of a depression. - Depression GDP loss more than 10
- Between1937-1938 GDP declined 18.2
- The term recession was created to differentiate
between this type of long and severe economic
state and a milder economic situation. - The current economic situation is unlikely to
become a depression due to government
intervention and policies that were not in place
during the 1930s.
Source IHG
11Effect of corporate cutbacks
Pressure to Reduce Costs
- Fewer
- Internal meetings
- Prospect business only
- Cheaper
- Senior management signoff
- Centralized meetings in hub cities
- Utilization of collaborative technology
- Downgrading from 4 5 star to 3 star hotels
- Shorter
- Reduction in length of stay
Source EIU/Amadeus White Paper-Feb 09
12Expectation of change
Back to Basics
- 28 of Executives expect to be downgraded in
hotel accommodations - 36 of Executives expect to be moved from
Business/First to Coach - Higher expectation of change in Asia and North
American markets
Source EIU/Amadeus White Paper-Feb 09
13Global view
Factors likely to cause curtailment of business
travel in 09
Source EIU/Amadeus White Paper-Feb 09
14Airlines
15The rise and fall of oil
200
130
120
180
110
160
100
140
90
Spot fuel price(Left Scale)
80
120
70
100
US/barrel
US billion
60
80
50
60
40
30
40
Fuel costs(Right scale)
20
20
10
0
0
Source IATA - December 2008
16Government taxes/fees on 300 ticket have nearly
tripled
1972
1992
2008
Taxes 7 (22)
Taxes 20 (60)
Taxes 13 (38)
Airfare Taxes
Sample itinerary assumes one-stop domestic round
trip with maximum passenger facility charge (PFC)
per airport 300 total price includes taxes and
fees.
17Strategy
The airlines are reacting to the challenging
environment by trying to reduce costs increase
revenues
Reduce Cost
Extra Fees
Capacity Shift
Mergers
Alliances
Increase Revenues
18Recommend buyers scrutinize their bargaining
position prior to committing to savings cost
avoidance targets
Watch market changes (e.g., schedule offerings
and pricing)
Analyze travel spend and evaluate alternative
control costs
Improve compliance to policy and preferred
vendors
Explore guaranteed fares for incremental savings
and cost avoidance
Evaluate realistic policy changes and strengthen
demand management
19Hotels
20U.S. industry room demand
Room demand has declined for five consecutive
months
Estimate
Source Smith Travel Research IHG PSP
21Global industry room demand
In the broader lodging industry, global hotel
demand has fallen
Year-Over-Year Percentage Change
Source IHG / Smith Travel Research
22U.S. supply demand change
The supply cycle is currently on the upswing but
will likely be constrained by the credit crisis
12 Month Rolling Average through December 2008
Source IHG / Smith Travel Research
23U.S. ADR and OCC change
Overall, the industry has been able to maintain
positive rate of growth in the face of declining
occupancy
12 Month Rolling Average through December 2008
Source IHG / Smith Travel Research
24U.S. industry average rate
ADR growth started to slip into negative
territory in the fourth Quarter
Estimate
Source Smith Travel Research IHG PSP
25U.S. industry occupancy
Occupancy has fallen for 14 consecutive months
Estimate
Source Smith Travel Research IHG PSP
26Global occupancy rate growth
Global hotel occupancy for the year is down, but
rate growth has remained relatively strong
-0.9
5.7
Source IHG / STR Global
27Global occupancy and rates
Global rates continue to rise, particularly in MEA
Occupancy by Region November YTD
Rate Change by Region November YTDConstant USD
Source IHG / STR Global
28Despite pendulum shift, savings require broader
approach than just negotiation of room rates
Know what you need and focus on total cost of
stay
Review tier strategy, market coverage, bulk buy
dynamic rates
Broaden solicitation list but consolidate final
selection
Be vigilant about dynamic pricing, last room
availability rate loading
Promote compliance, manage booking behavior,
influence travel pattern
29Global Effects
30The global economy crisis is the top security
threatNational U.S. Intelligence Director
Dennis Blair
31Events impacting your employees
Hurricane
32Where are your employees?
33Outlook
34Growth anticipated to return in 2010
GDP Change Annual Change
Source Blue Chip Economic Indicators, January
2009
35What will it take for U.S. and global economies
to recover?
A powerful Economic Recovery Act
Extensive planning
Taking decisive action
Rebound of external demand
Consumer confidence
36QA