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Weekly Global Hotel Performance Trends from STR: 14 – 20 May 2023

Global Hotel Industry Performance

If occupancy continues at this pace and follows 2019, it will trend up until mid-August. Weekly ADR rose 18% YoY to US$142 with RevPAR at US$98 (+32%).

Global occupancy (excluding U.S.) was 68.8% for the week, up 7.3 ppts from the comparable week last year. Occupancy has indexed at 97% of 2019 values for the past six weeks.

This article originally appeared on STR.

U.S. Performance

U.S. hotel industry occupancy came in at 67.5%, which tied for the highest level of the year with 12-18 March 2023. Occupancy increased 2.4 percentage points (ppts) from the previous week but dipped 1.0 ppts year over year. Most of this decline was due to the calendar shift around Mother’s Day.

Average daily rate (ADR) at US$159 was US$3.53 higher than the prior week and a 3.6% increase year over year (YoY). The increase was just behind the most recent CPI-indexed annual inflation rate (5.0%).

The U.S. Top 25 Markets finished the week at 73.3% occupancy, up 2.6 ppts WoW. Markets outside of the Top 25 increased similarly (+2.4 ppts WoW) to 64.4%. Top 25 occupancy has been above 70% for the past five weeks.

ADR in the Top 25 Markets increased 4.3% WoW to US$195, while all other markets experienced a smaller increase (0.7%) to US$137.

Monday through Wednesday occupancy for the Top 25 Markets increased 0.8 ppts WoW to 73.3%, while Friday-Saturday occupancy increased 8.9 ppts to 81.8%. The large gain was due to easy comparisons to the previous weekend, which was ahead of Mother’s Day. A similar WoW pattern was seen outside the Top 25 Markets with Monday through Wednesday occupancy increasing 1.3 ppts WoW and weekend occupancy gaining 6.6 ppts WoW.

Graduations, concerts, and sporting events buoyed many markets during the week. Among the Top 25 Markets, four markets surpassed 80% occupancy, all increasing more than 4ppts from the previous week.

Markets outside the Top 25 achieving notable occupancy levels were Rochester, NY (77.3%), host of the PGA Championship, Knoxville (76.4%), host of the University of Tennessee’s graduation, and Baltimore (76.2%), host of the Preakness Stakes.

Group bookings at luxury and upper upscale hotels are settling into the end-of-conference-season patterns. Demand increased 3.1% WoW and declined 3.3% YoY. In the next week of data, we will see group decline as expected during the weeks surrounding the Memorial Day weekend. Transient bookings at luxury and upper upscale hotels increased 3.5% from the prior week and were 2.6% above last year’s levels.

Global Performance

Global occupancy (excluding U.S.) was 68.8% for the week, up 7.3 ppts from the comparable week last year. Occupancy has indexed at 97% of 2019 values for the past six weeks. If occupancy continues at this pace and follows 2019, it will trend up until mid-August. Weekly ADR rose 18% YoY to US$142 with RevPAR at US$98 (+32%).

Among the top 10 countries, based on supply, occupancy reached 71.5%, a slight increase week over week of 2.2ppts and 10.1ppts YoY. ADR was up 15.4% with RevPAR increasing 34% to US$97, which was the highest level since the start of the pandemic.

Outside of the Top 10 countries, Ireland had the world’s highest occupancy at 88.7%, followed by Singapore (82.6%).

Final thoughts

U.S. and global results point to a return to normal patterns. Graduations, concerts, and sporting events are driving market level performance while leisure travel in general remains strong. Group is slowing as spring convention seasons wanes, and business/corporate improves with continuing gains in weekday occupancy. ADR remained firmly grounded with positive annual gains, although the rate of ADR and RevPAR growth is moderating and will continue to do so.

Looking ahead

Going back to normal will be key to understanding performance fluctuations over the next two weeks. Based on the previous 20 years, expect occupancy for the week before Memorial Day (week ending 27 May) to be flat to slightly up with ADR following suit. For the week containing the holiday (week ending 3 June), performance will be impacted by a significant drop in both measures. The comparison to 2022 will likely be even more turbulent. Prior to the pandemic, Memorial Day occupancy averaged a drop of 25ppts WoW. Last year, the drop was considerably less (-18ppts). Thus, if occupancy follows its normal pattern, as we predict, the YoY comparison will seem alarming but it’s not. It’s what we should expect and what we have seen in the past.

Posted by on May 29, 2023.

Categories: Trends

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