Bram Gallagher |
Dallas, TX – Dec. 14, 2020 –
The recent surge in COVID-19 infections has dampened expectations for U.S.
hotel performance through the first half of 2021, but news of effective
vaccines has bolstered projections of U.S. lodging industry recovery beginning
in earnest during the second half of next year, according to CBRE’s latest
hotel forecast.
According to the recently released Q3 2020
edition of Hotel Horizons®, CBRE Hotels Research is
forecasting an average national occupancy level of 44.4 percent during the
first half of 2021. This measure increases to 55.7 percent during the year’s
second half.
“The increased spread of the COVID-19 virus and
reinstatement of government restrictions, combined with the lack of an economic
stimulus package, has lowered our outlook for the performance of U.S. hotels
during the remainder of 2020 and through next year’s first half,” said Bram Gallagher Ph.D., Senior Hotel
Economist with CBRE Hotels Research.
CBRE’s Q3 2020 forecasts call for a return to
2019 occupancy, average daily room rates (ADR), and RevPAR levels in 2024.
In general, properties that operate in the lower-priced chain-scale segments
will recover to 2019 performance levels sooner than the higher-priced hotels.
One exception is luxury hotels. While
occupancy levels in this category have declined significantly during 2020,
luxury still has maintained some relative stability in room rates. It
appears that leisure travelers who prefer luxury accommodations continue to
have the means to pay the price premium.
The diverse impact of COVID-19 on different
groups of travelers becomes evident when analyzing changes in lodging demand by
chain scale:
- Luxury and upper-upscale properties are most
dependent on businesspeople and conventioneers and will see their demand
levels decline in excess of 60 percent in 2020.
-
- Conversely, hotels operating in the economy and
midscale segments will see their business fall off by less than 25
percent.
“The confidence provided by an effective vaccine will serve to sustain the relatively strong leisure travel patterns observed during the summer of 2020, plus initiate a significant return of corporate travelers during the second half of 2021.
"Group demand, on the other hand, will lag
in recovery because of the advance-booking nature of this segment,” Gallagher
said.
The prospects for improvement in ADR during 2021
are influenced by these demand patterns. Overall, CBRE is
forecasting a 1.3 percent decline in ADR for U.S. hotels during 2021 and annual
increases in ADR for each of the three lower-priced chain scales, but continued
declines in ADR for the higher-priced segments.
Construction Activity
Further bolstering pricing power for U.S. hoteliers is a deceleration in new hotel construction activity. CBRE forecasts U.S. hotel supply to increase by 1.8 percent in 2020, and another 1.4 percent in 2021.
However, net supply gains are projected to dip below 1
percent in 2022, thus lowering the impact of new competition concurrent with
the recovery in lodging demand.
While revenue recovery may occur in 2024, some
hotels may see their profits return to 2019 levels earlier, as US hotel
operators have enacted effective cost control measures in 2020 to offset the
severe declines in revenue, and will likely keep them in place for the
foreseeable future.
The Q3 2020 edition of Hotel Horizons® for the
U.S. lodging industry and 65 major markets can be purchased by visiting: https://pip.cbrehotels.com.
CONTACT:
CHRIS DALY
PRESIDENT
DG Public Relations, LLC
42806 Oatyer Court
Broadlands, Va. 20148
Main: 703-435-6293
Mobile: 703-864-5553