HENDERSONVILLE, Tennessee—Signs of a recovery for the U.S. hotel industry might be few and far between as 2009 creeps to a close, but executives at Smith Travel Research think there’s reason for optimism in the future. An uptick for the hotel industry won’t come soon—as in the next six or eight months—but it should be in full swing by 2011, according to STR’s latest U.S. industry forecast.
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Mark Lomanno
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Randy Smith
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“I wouldn’t call it optimistic for 2010, but it’s definitely optimistic for 2011,” said Mark Lomanno, STR’s president. “Overall conditions in the economy will begin showing significant improvement as 2010 unfolds, and that will help fuel a recover for the hotel industry.”
“2009 has been an extremely difficult year, but in spite of that difficulty, the hotel industry has remained profitable overall,” said Randy Smith, STR’s co-founder and chairman. “There are a lot of individual properties in trouble, and we haven’t seen the end of properties in serious trouble, but overall the industry has continued to make money. This industry still makes money, and that’s more than a lot of industries can say.”
The company’s revised forecast includes some tweaking of its 2009 and 2010 outlooks, as well as its first look at 2011 for the hotel industry:
Occupancy: 2009 will end at -8.8 percent (revised from -8.4 percent); 2010 figures will be down 0.2 percent (revised from -0.6 percent); and 2011 will be up 2.4 percent.
Average daily rate: 2009 will close down 8.9 percent (revised from -9.7 percent); 2010 will be down 3.4 percent (unchanged from previous forecast); and 2011 will be up 5.5 percent.
“In the current cycle, it’s increasingly easy to predict supply and a little easier to predict demand,” Lomanno said. “What is difficult is predicting rate growth … how aggressive the industry will be in raising rates is virtually impossible to predict.”
“As this thing hopefully starts to wind down, the industry will be well positioned for a recovery as the supply growth rate will drop,” Smith said. “The question really gets back to room rates and how aggressively the industry can raise them.
“We’ve seen the worst of the rate declines,” he said. “We’ll see some improvement on that front, but it will be difficult.”
Revenue per available room: 2009’s RevPAR will decline 17.0 percent (revised from 17.1 percent; it will drop 3.6 percent in 2010 (revised from -4.0 percent) before jumping 5.5 percent in 2011.
Supply: The number of guestrooms will end 2009 up 3.2 percent (revised from +3.0 percent); up 1.8 percent in 2010; and up 0.8 percent in 2011.
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- View video of Mark Lomanno presenting STR's revised forecast.
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“The construction pipeline will mostly be built between now and early 2011,” Lomanno said. “There is a potential for that (2011) number to be a little lower. However, for that to happen, the number of removals from the supply will have to dramatically increase.”
“There’s a constant drain on the industry to continue to support marginal properties,” Smith said. “Properties that go bankrupt yet stay open and obsolete properties that should be demolished yet stay open are all drains on good operators of properties. Some way to close those properties would be a reward to all of the operators who perform well year after year.”
Demand: Room demand in 2009 will be down 6.0 percent (revised from -5.5 percent) before turning positive in 2010 at +1.6 percent (revised from +1.3 percent). Demand will grow 3.2 percent in 2011, according to the STR forecast.