Hotel Online Special Report

Con Edison Solutions - Find out how energy deregulation can empower your business
Battling Lower Occupancy, U.S. Hotels' Room Rates 
Slow Their Advance, PricewaterhouseCoopers Says
    Still, Room Rates Will Creep Up in 1999
 
NEW YORK and LOS ANGELES, Jan. 13, 1999 -  As occupancy at U.S. hotels dips further below the 25-year average in 1999, the lodging industry will experience growth in average daily room rates at its slowest pace in five years. Even so, average daily room rates will creep up, with Upper Upscale and New England hotel rates leading the pack, fueling a third consecutive year of record profits for the lodging industry, reports the Lodging Research Network. The findings were issued today at the 14th Annual UCLA Hotel Industry Investment Conference at the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles.

"Average daily room rates, which have risen robustly since 1994, will slow their growth to 3.9 percent in 1999 -- from 4.5 percent in 1998 and 6.2 percent in 1997," says Bjorn Hanson, Ph.D., New York-based global partner for hospitality and leisure in the PricewaterhouseCoopers Financial Advisory Services (FAS) practice. "In part, this is a reflection of the U.S. lodging industry's lower occupancy rate, which will fall further below the long-term average of 65.0 percent to 63.0 percent in 1999 from 63.9 percent in 1998," Dr. Hanson adds. Historical figures are from Smith Travel Research.

But at 3.9 percent, the 1999 rise in average daily hotel room rates is nearly twice the U.S. Consumer Price Index (inflation) rate, which is forecast to be 2.1 percent this year, Dr. Hanson observes. "The revenue that comes from room rates higher than inflation will certainly sweep the U.S. lodging industry to another year of record profits at approximately $20.5 billion in 1999, up from $18.9 billion in 1998," he says.

Upper Upscale and New England Hotels See Biggest Rate Rises

By segment, Upper Upscale U.S. hotels will see the greatest rise in average daily rates at 5.0 percent, according to the Lodging Research Network. Next are Midprice - without - Food - and - Beverage hotels at 4.5 percent, Upscale hotels at 4.4 percent, Economy hotels at 3.5 percent and Midprice-with-Food-and-Beverage at 3.4 percent, wwwlodgingresearch.com says.

By geography, New England (ME, NH, VT, MA, CT, RI) hotels will lead the nation in average daily room rate growth at 4.6 percent in 1999, followed by:

  • the U.S. South Atlantic (DE, MD, WV, DC, VA, NC, SC, GA, FL) region at 4.1 percent
  • the nation's Pacific (WA, OR, CA, AK, HI) and Middle Atlantic (NY, NJ, PA) regions at 4.0 percent each
  • the East North Central (OH, MI, IN, IL, WI) region at 3.9 percent
  • the West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX) region at 3.5 percent
  • the West North Central (MN, IA, MO, KS, NE, SD, ND) region at 3.4 percent the East South Central (KY, TN, AL, MS) region at 1.5 percent
  • and the Mountain Region (MT, ID, WY, CO, UT, NV, AZ, NM) at 0.9 percent.
With a worldwide network of 6000 professionals, PricewaterhouseCoopers' FAS practice provides creative solutions and ideas that increase value to clients during critical periods and when they are making important decisions that define their future. The FAS business is organized along five product lines. The Business Recovery Services, Dispute Analysis Investigations, and Valuations Shareholder Value product lines are the largest in the world. The Project Finance Privatization product line was rated second in Privatisation International's global league table by number of privatization financial advisory assignments and second in Project Finance International's global ranking by number of project finance advisory mandates. The Mergers Acquisitions product line was second in the world in number of deals completed, according to Securities Data Company. PricewaterhouseCoopers advised on 341 deals with a total worth of $33.2 billion. PricewaterhouseCoopers (http:/www.pwcglobal.com), the world's largest professional services organization, helps its clients build value, manage risk and improve their performance. Drawing on the talents of more than 146,000 people in 148 countries, the organization provides a full range of business advisory services to leading global, national and local companies and to public institutions. PricewaterhouseCoopers refers to the US firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and other members of the worldwide PricewaterhouseCoopers organization.
###
 
Contact:
Adam Brecht of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, 212-596-5079, or [email protected]
--
http:/www.pwcglobal.com
http:/www.lodgingresearch.com
 --
 
Also See: Even As U.S. Hotel Occupancy Rates Decline, Average Daily Room Rates / Sept 1998 
Hawaii Hotel Occupancy Drops While Room Rates Hold Steady Reports PricewaterhouseCoopers / Oct 1998 

To search Hotel Online data base of News and Trends Go to Hotel.Online Search
Back to Hotel.Online Press Releases
Home | Welcome! | Hospitality News | Classifieds | Catalogs & Pricing | Viewpoint Forum | Ideas/Trends
Please contact Hotel.Online with your comments and suggestions.