Although the region is home to some of the priciest cities
in the world, corporate travel costs are moderating across much of the
Asia/Pacific region. Growing demand there struggles to keep up with a glut of
hotel supply.
[Please click here to view the digital edition of the 2015 Corporate Travel Index, featuring all per diem listings, downloadable as a pdf.]
Combined hotel rates and miscellaneous costs for 2014
declined year over year in 15 of the 22 Asia/Pacific markets measured by the BTN Corporate Travel Index, many of them
by double-digit percentages. With the exception of Jakarta (up 7.2
percent)—which has seen strong business travel growth in recent years amid a
strengthening economy and growing middle class—and New Delhi (up 5.5 percent),
increases were about 2 percent or less. Overall, the average daily hotel cost
in the Asia/Pacific region in 2014 was $184, down 14.7 percent from the 2013
CTI.
In its forecast for 2015, BCD Travel consultancy Advito
noted that in emerging markets within Asia, "plentiful new rooms are
applying downward pressure on rates and encouraging hotels to seek deals with
corporate clients. Companies with well-managed programs can dictate some very
attractive deals in the region."
As of January, STR Global reported 2,400 hotels totaling
more than 540,000 rooms in planning stages or under construction. About a
quarter of those rooms are in China; other countries with big hotel growth in
the region include Indonesia, India and Malaysia.
While not measured by CTI, corporate travel costs also
benefit from the proliferation of low-cost carriers across the Asia/Pacific.
During the past 10 years, LCCs have increased their traffic share in the region
from nearly nothing to 58 percent, according to Advito. Chinese officials also
want to expand LCCs' current 7 percent local market share. Some LCCs, though,
including Tigerair in Singapore and Qantas subsidiary Jetstar Asia, have
curtailed growth as they struggle to keep pace with overall capacity growth in
the region. The three largest U.S. carriers, meanwhile, have added several
routes to the Asia/Pacific region, and Delta Air Lines is especially hard at
work trying to develop a new transpacific hub in Seattle.
Hong Kong, despite some demand hiccups from pro-democracy
protests in the second half of the year, maintained its status as the most
expensive corporate travel market in the Asia/Pacific region and is the
third-most expensive market among the 100 non-U.S. markets measured in the CTI.
Combined hotel rates and miscellaneous costs there increased 0.9 percent year
over year, and hotel rates alone are more than 75 percent higher than any other
city in the region.
Average daily meal costs in Hong Kong are among the highest
in the world, though still shy of Shanghai, which is cheaper than only inflation-plagued
Caracas (see page 22). While Shanghai hotel and miscellaneous costs are average
for the region and flat year over year, sky-high food costs propelled the city
to fourth-most expensive Asia/Pacific market, compared with 10th last year.
In Marriott International's fourth-quarter earnings call,
CFO Carl Berquist said his company projects continued strong travel demand in
Shanghai this year and improving strength in Hong Kong.
Elsewhere in mainland China, combined daily hotel rates and
miscellaneous costs declined across all cities measured in the CTI, including
Beijing (down 5 percent), Shenzhen (down 3.1 percent), Guangzhou (down 8.9
percent) and Tianjin (down 1 percent). Beside rapid supply growth, travel
demand in the country is still down thanks to government austerity programs
that slowed corporate travel among state-owned enterprises, though business on
that end picked up in 2014, Hyatt Hotels Corp. president and CEO Mark
Hoplamazian said in the company's fourth-quarter earnings call.
Meanwhile, the United States and China in November reached a
reciprocal agreement that extended short-term business and leisure visa
validity from one year to 10, which could boost corporate travel traffic
between the two nations.
"China obviously has seen some slowdown in broader
economic growth, but it is still one of the highest-growing markets in the
world," Hilton Worldwide CEO Christopher Nassetta said in the company's
fourth-quarter earnings call. "We are still managing to drive pretty
healthy growth there."
Tokyo and Seoul were the second- and third-most expensive
cities, respectively, for corporate travel in the Asia/Pacific region. While
corporate hotel rates in Tokyo declined significantly year over year,
miscellaneous costs, which include such daily costs as taxi rides, are the
highest in the region. Still, combined hotel rates and miscellaneous costs were
down 15.7 percent there, the largest drop in the region.
That figure increased 2.3 percent in the Osaka-Kobe market.
Advito noted that Osaka hotel corporate rate increases were among the highest
in the region, along with Kuala Lumpur and Suzhou, China.
The Economist this
month named Singapore the most expensive city in the world to live in, but
prices in the city-state have moderated for business travel visitors. Its hotel
rates are the second highest in the region, but overall daily hotel rates and
miscellaneous costs declined 5.5 percent year over year in the CTI. As such,
Singapore fell from the second-most expensive Asia/Pacific market for business
travel in 2013 to fifth this year.
The two Australian cities in the CTI both saw large
year-over-year drops in hotel rates and miscellaneous costs. In Sydney, they
fell 14.4 percent, as the city dropped to the sixth-most expensive in the
region in 2014 from third in 2013. Hotel rates and miscellaneous costs in
Melbourne declined 13.2 percent year over year.
Combined hotel and miscellaneous costs declined
significantly in Bangkok (down 12.2 percent), where the travel industry has
continued to suffer from Thailand's political unrest. Overall, Bangkok dropped
to the CTI's third-cheapest city in the Asia/Pacific region, while it ranked in
the middle in 2013.
Corporate travel in India has struggled in recent years,
with hotel rates plummeting amid slowing demand and significant hotel supply
growth. While combined hotel rates and miscellaneous costs increased in New
Delhi, they declined significantly in Mumbai (down 11 percent) and Bangalore
(down 12.8 percent). Those two remained the cheapest for business travel in the
Asia/Pacific, as they were in 2013. Mumbai's hotel rates have declined with new
hotels opening in northern business districts, according to HRG's Hotel Survey
2015. However, Bangalore is experiencing a "modest rise" in hotel
rates as demand picks up, and Hyderabad also is growing rates as the IT sector
booms, according to the survey.
There are other signs of a turnaround. Former Starwood
Hotels & Resorts CEO Frits van Paasschen, speaking on the company's
fourth-quarter earnings call prior to his February resignation, noted that
Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi, who took office in May 2014, had "brought
a fresh focus on business generally and on tourism in particular."
Starwood in March 2015 also temporarily relocated its global headquarters to India,
repeating previous moves in Shanghai and Dubai.
This
report originally appeared in the March 16, 2015, issue of Business Travel News.