Leisure demand, while still strong, began to soften in the back half of this year for US hotels, as other parts of the world continued to reopen their vacation destinations and leisure travellers began to once again feel safe travelling abroad. Increases in individual business travel and group business have not yet been able to fully offset this softening.
NB: This is an article from PwC
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As a result, occupancy levels have declined in each of the past seven months, relative to comparable 2022 levels, and are expected to continue to be down during the remainder of this year and through at least the first quarter of 2024. Room rate growth had played a significant role in the initial recovery for US hotels but softened significantly in Q2 before falling to below inflationary growth levels in Q3. That said, ADR growth is expected to begin to increase and slightly exceed a declining inflation level beginning in Q4 and into next year.
The Fed’s continued increases in its policy rate, continued declines in the public markets since early August, and more recently, the war in Israel have begun to have a downstream impact on hotel demand. Nonetheless, we expect annual occupancy for US hotels this year to increase to 63.0 percent. With declines in occupancies for the balance of this year, we expect average daily room rates to increase 4.5 percent for the year, with resultant RevPAR up 5.2 percent – – approximately 114 percent of prepandemic levels, on a nominal dollar basis.
Since our May 2023 outlook, the Fed’s monetary policy has remained a major concern, with no material improvement expected until sometime next year, keeping the availability of debt – that is priced in sync with asking prices for hotel assets – largely unavailable.
As a result, transaction activity has been and is expected to remain muted until the Fed adjusts monetary policy in a meaningful way, or the bid-ask spread on hotel assets narrows.
As we enter 2024, the outlook for midweek travel remains unclear with some companies indicating changes to their business travel policies in efforts to tighten corporate budgets, as well as achieve sustainability goals. Outbound international leisure travel continues to outpace inbound, given the relative strength of the dollar and pent-up demand for international travel following the pandemic. With occupancy levels expected to be relatively flat in 2024, performance gains are once again expected to come almost entirely from ADR, with an expected year-over-year increase in RevPAR of 2.7 percent – approximately 117 percent of pre-pandemic levels.
Significant risks to this outlook include the pace and magnitude of changes in the macroeconomic environment, as well as increasing geopolitical tensions.