As corporate travel demand rises within the United States,
the combined daily cost of renting cars, staying in hotels and eating three
meals a day looks as though it will follow suit in the coming year, much as the
data in BTN's Corporate Travel Index
show occurred in 2014.
[Please click here to view the digital edition of the 2015 Corporate Travel Index, featuring all per diem listings, downloadable as a pdf.]
Hotels are poised to lead the way for rate hikes,
capitalizing on high demand and below-average supply growth. With both
corporate spending and transaction volume up year over year in the dining
sector, restaurants, too, will enjoy improved pricing power.
Rental car companies, on the other hand, are struggling to
raise rates in a highly competitive market. Though some agencies predict 2015
may be the year car rental suppliers successfully hike pricing, CTI data
indicates 2014 generally was another flat year.
Add all those costs together, and San Francisco, with a
per-diem rate of $509.50, for the second straight year topped the 99 other U.S.
markets in the CTI as the most expensive city in which to conduct a business
trip. That compares with an overall average U.S. daily cost of $306.91.
Hotels Push for Hikes
According to the Index, daily corporate hotel expenses
across 100 U.S. markets increased about 3.5 percent year over year. Multiple
markets experienced double-digit percentage growth in average daily rate, but
San Francisco beat out second-place New York by a significant margin. Other
top-five markets for daily hotel expenses included Boston, Washington, D.C.,
and Honolulu.
The connecting thread across the markets, and particularly
the CTI top five, is the combination of rising demand across all segments and a
fairly stagnant supply rate, especially among full-service hotels.
PricewaterhouseCoopers in a January 2015 report confirmed
the trend, noting that occupancy in 2015 should reach levels not seen since
1984, while supply is expected to increase only 1.5 percent year over year,
below the long-term average of 1.9 percent.
In its 2015 forecast for business travel, Advito, the
consulting arm of BCD Travel, projected that U.S. hoteliers would seek to take
advantage of favorable conditions by hiking corporate rates 6 percent to 8
percent year over year. Large hotel companies made a similar attempt in 2014,
seeking rate increases of 7 percent or 8 percent, but most achieved only 3
percent to 5 percent increases outside the highest-demand cities. Advito
attributed these lower increases to a lack of confidence in the economic
recovery and growing competition from midprice chains.
American Express Global Business Travel in its 2015 forecast
also argued that increased competition from midprice hotels could mitigate
increases at higher-end properties. It did project price increases in the 3
percent to 7 percent range, noting, "The degree of these increases will
vary significantly city to city."
TCG Consulting in its 2015 global forecast predicted a
similar U.S. ADR increase of 4 percent.
Meanwhile, during a recent earnings call, Hilton Worldwide
president and CEO Christopher Nassetta spoke confidently to investors when
asked about corporate negotiations. "Frankly, I think it's becoming more
of a seller's market than a buyer's market," he said.
Starwood Hotels & Resorts in a recent earnings call
confirmed that corporate-rate increases in 60 percent of its 2015 bids in were
in the "mid-single digits on average."
Marriott International reported similar year-over-year
increases of 5 percent to 6 percent on average. CFO and executive vice
president Carl Burquist said Marriott is bidding on fewer accounts "in
order to increase available inventory for higher-rated retail business."
Car Rental Firms Yearn
For Increases
Though rental car companies are itching to grow rates after
a spell of flat or decreased pricing, 2014 doesn't appear to have been their
year in the United States.
The average paid corporate daily car rental rates in the CTI's
100 U.S. markets among BCD Travel clients decreased about 3 percent—1 percent
if accounting for taxes and fees. At an average daily cost of $46.89, rental
car spending makes up 15 percent of on-the-ground costs for a business trip.
Consolidation has continued to create challenges for
industry leaders, which are forced to manage excess inventory as used-car
pricing remains weak.
Another factor forcing down pricing power, in spite of
growing demand, is competition among the three major suppliers: The Hertz
Corp., Enterprise Holdings and Avis Budget Group, which make up approximately
90 percent of the U.S. car rental industry.
Enabled by its lower cost structure, Enterprise continues to
undercut its competitors' attempts to raise rates, according to Advito. But
Enterprise may not be able to keep up its current pattern.
"Since Enterprise Holdings is not making massive
marketshare gains, it may change strategy by seeking to boost profits by
raising rates and improving yield instead," according to Advito's
forecast. "While it may not yet be ready to compete on product instead of
price, it is getting closer."
Advito has seen no solid evidence that any car rental firms
are raising corporate rates but forecasts that any increases would stay within
the 2 percent to 4 percent range.
Carlson Wagonlit Travel predicted rental rates would remain
flat in 2015 but noted that a steady reduction of supply and more effective
vehicle utilization could result in pricing power down the road.
During a recent earnings call, Avis Budget Group reported
full-year commercial and overall 2014 year-over-year price increases of 2
percent each in North America. The company also disclosed that 75 percent of
corporate contracts that were renewed in 2014 maintained pricing levels or
included rate increases.
Avis Budget chairman and CEO Ronald Nelson said the company
would continue to push pricing in 2015.
"All the signals from our competitors are that they're
moving to raise prices. They have the same cost pressures that we do,"
Nelson said, adding that Avis Budget since the start of 2015 had increased
pricing four times, and twice the rate pushes were met with "unprecedented
adoption rates" from competitors.
American Express, meanwhile, predicted corporate buyers
would push back against increases and generally succeed, with car rental base
rates growing 0.5 percent to 1 percent at most.
Hertz, still wrapping up a review of its financial
statements for the past three years, did not officially report earnings for
2014. However, in an update of operating results, the company reported fairly
flat 2014 revenue across the board.
Nelson, referencing an unnamed competitor in "financial
disarray"—Hertz, probably—said that once that firm solves its financial
issues, the industrywide pricing would improve.
Restaurants Maintain
Pricing Strength
Dining makes up more than 31 percent of daily on-the-ground
business costs, according to CTI data, and the average U.S. cost to eat three
meals a day was $96.89.
Honolulu, dependent on imported goods, topped this year's
list as the priciest city for business dining with a total daily cost of
$129.25. Trailing just behind were New York and Seattle.
Dinova, a provider of dining rebate programs, witnessed a
5.6 percent year-over-year increase in 2014 overall restaurant spending by its
clients. Additionally, transaction volume increased 3.6 percent last year,
illustrating that employees are eating out more often. The average per-check
dining spend among Dinova's clients in 2014 increased about 2 percent year over
year to $53.44.
In its 2015 corporate dining spend forecast, Dinova
predicted year-over-year client spend increases between 5 percent and 8.5
percent, and a transaction volume increase of 5.5 percent.
"The average check itself we don't anticipate being a
major cause for corporate programs to see their dining bill go up," said a
Dinova spokesman. "It's more the frequency that's going to drive the
overall dining spend up for corporations."
Dinova anticipates the average 2015 per-check dining cost
will increase about 2 percent to 3 percent year over year, costing between
$54.50 and $55.04.
The National Restaurant Association projects 3.8 percent
growth in overall restaurant sales in the United States during 2015. However,
according to National Restaurant Association data, wholesale food prices rose
about 25 percent during the past five years and year-over-year pricing jumped
more than 5 percent in 2014.
"The wholesale food cost levels of many key commodities
are putting significant pressure on many restaurateurs' bottom lines,"
National Restaurant Association senior vice president of research Hudson Riehle
said in a statement. He added that price inflation during the next year is
expected to let up on certain major commodities, such as pork and dairy.
"Slowing price growth is obviously good news,"
Riehle said, "but it doesn't mean that food costs will be back down to
what they were before those increases started."
This
report originally appeared in the March 16, 2015, issue of Business Travel News.