London ranks as the Europe, Middle East and Africa region's
most expensive city, according to BTN's
Corporate Travel Index. While hotels' average daily rate decreased for most of
the 59 EMEA cities analyzed in the CTI, London's ADR increased $8 year over
year to $340.
[Please click here to view the digital edition of the 2015 Corporate Travel Index, featuring all per diem listings, downloadable as a pdf.]
Rates in London in 2014 increased particularly in the
Docklands, which houses one of London's business districts, said HRG director
of global hotel relations Margaret Bowler. Such hikes also pushed many London
travelers to downgrade to more affordable options in 2014, causing five-star
hotel rates to decline, "the complete reverse of what happened in 2013,"
according to Bowler.
"Customers are looking to the midmarket because they're
all looking for savings, as London is expensive," she said. "The
winners in 2014 with the highest increases were budget [hotels]."
Other notable EMEA cities that experienced year-over-year
ADR increases included Glasgow (up 23.4 percent), Manchester (up 14.3 percent)
and Edinburgh (up 13 percent), according to the CTI. Moscow and Oslo's ADR
dropped the most sharply year over year, at 44 percent and 20 percent,
respectively.
Major hotel companies, though, continue to push development.
Starwood in 2015 plans to open in Europe 15 hotels, and 40 during the next five
years. Marriott in 2014 launched its Moxy brand in Europe and now has 16 such
hotels "under development" there, according to its year-end results.
Hilton now has 54 Doubletree hotels in Europe and expects the continent to
remain "generally stable, with [revenue per available room] growth in the
mid-single digits for 2015," Hilton president and CEO Christopher Nassetta
said during a February call with analysts to discuss its year-end results.
However, the ongoing Russian- Ukrainian conflict "will likely pressure
performance in the East, while France remains soft," he said.
Moscow Exchange Rate
Causes Havoc
Moscow's drastic decline owed to currency volatility as a
result of economic sanctions on Russia in response to its ongoing conflict with
Ukraine. Despite the ADR decrease, Moscow remains expensive when measured in
U.S. dollars, HRG's Bowler said. However, "if you look at it in local
currency, it's far greater because of the currency impact on the exchange rate,"
she explained.
Despite already having negotiated 2015 hotel rates, travel
management company Carlson Wagonlit Travel, which negotiates corporate rates
for Russia in rubles, this year restarted negotiations with its hotel suppliers
following the exchange-rate fluctuations, according to CWT director for EMEA
hotel solutions Virginie Pouget.
"The exchange rate increased the [hotel] rates a lot,
nearly 16 percent, when they were supposed to be kind of flat," Pouget
said. "That's an issue for clients, and we need to go back to
negotiations."
The Russian and Ukrainian conflict will continue to impact
Europe, especially Eastern Europe, as the continent is "quite dependent on
natural gas and oil exports from Russia, which can have a severe impact on the
European economy," Global Business Travel Association vice president of
research Joseph Bates said during a September 2014 webinar.
Still, Starwood plans to "double its footprint" in
Russia during the next three years, including the addition of a Sheraton in Ufa
and a Four Points Sheraton in Kaluga both scheduled to open this year,
according to its 2014 year-end report.
Whether the additional supply will help oversaturate Russia's
lodging market is an open question, according to HRG's Bowler, dependent at
least partially on whether other countries pursue new economic sanctions.
"It's difficult to say," she said. "Moscow
had a few years where there was no new supply. For the past few years there has
been new product coming in, and it totally stood up. It really depends on what
happens with the sanctions. An international [hotel company], even if it brings
in lower-tier brands, offers that peace of mind for international travelers, that
security."
Other EMEA Trends
• HRG's Bowler said 2015 was not exactly off to a rollicking
start for hotels in Europe, plagued a bit by bad weather and renewed corporate
cost-consciousness.
"We did see a lot of corporate pricing go up in terms
of negotiation season. Every hotel group is focused on growing ADR. However,
what they actually achieve could be different. I know 2015 in a lot of markets
has started a wee bit softer than hoped," HRG's Bowler said. "Weather
is a big issue. We have corporates starting to make savings and reduce travel."
Because of the January massacre at the office of Paris
satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in
January, CWT's Pouget said "several" of the TMC's U.S. clients
canceled trips to Europe until the situation stabilized. "January and
February have been slightly affected," she said, "but the forecast
for more and the rest of Europe are not affected at all."
• During a September Global Business Travel Association
webinar, Philippe Chausson, director of EMEA hotel solutions for CWT, said
independent hotels are more likely than chain properties to reduce rates, and
the sheer volume of independent properties—which represent 60 percent of the
European market—is pressuring rates downward. Chausson added, though, that some
independent hotels may be inclined to enable booking of their inventory through
online travel agencies to improve distribution, leading to increased
competition.
• Travel managers also may have to deal with more taxes in
2015. France last year increased its value-added tax on hotels to 10 percent
from 7 percent, and the country is considering more taxes, Chausson said.
Tax-rate parity continues to be a "heated debate" in Europe and could
lead to an increase in competition, resulting in lower rates, he added.
• Hotel-shopping tools like tripBam "absolutely"
will have an impact on hotel rates, HRG's Bowler said. "I don't think it's
hotels' best friend. It's also why a lot of [hotels] are changing their
cancellation terms and making them longer," she added.
While sharing-economy lodging facilitators like Airbnb,
MorningCroissant and BedyCasa are popular among leisure travelers, Chausson
said they would not impact the business travel market—yet. "It could
potentially impact, but don't expect it in 2015," he said.
"It will affect more the leisure market," CWT's
Pouget said. "Generation Y is becoming more interested in accommodation.
Corporate travel has many companies that don't push it. They allow it, but don't
mention it. They really want to go on tracking travelers."
• In the Middle East, "the cities leading the charge
are Dubai, Istanbul and Manama," HRG's Bowler said, adding that Abu Dhabi
is "one of those cities that has had so much new supply going in."
• Hilton expects the Middle East and Africa to recover in
2015, with RevPAR growing in the mid-to-high single-digit percentages, Nassetta
said during the call, adding that Egypt is experiencing some impact from
lowered Russian demand.
• Before resigning from his post as Starwood president and
CEO, Frits van Paasschen during a February call said that despite bumps in the
market like volatile currencies and the "collapse of the Russian economy,
most indicators suggest that even if this year is different from the past, the
global recovery will continue for a few more years."
This
report originally appeared in the March 16, 2015, issue of Business Travel News.