PORTSMOUTH, NH – Analysts at Lodging Econometrics (LE) report that at the end of the third quarter of 2019, China’s total construction pipeline has grown to 3,380 projects/628,972 rooms. Currently, the country has 2,548 projects with 438,797 rooms under construction with projects scheduled to start construction in the next 12 months at 404 projects with 85,026 rooms. Projects in the early planning stage have 428 projects/105,149 rooms. Hotel development continues to thrive despite the continued economic struggles in the region and the on-going trade and tariff disputes with the United States. In the third quarter, China announced 661 new projects with 80,692 rooms into the pipeline. Through the third quarter of 2019, China opened 658 new hotels/92,932 rooms with another 363 new hotels/45,799 rooms forecast to open by year-end. In 2020, 1,084 new hotels with a lofty 157,893 rooms are forecast to open. Should all of these hotels come online in 2020, then China will open the largest number of new hotel rooms since the cyclical peak in 2014. In 2021, following a year of all-time high new hotel openings, LE forecasts that the number of new hotel openings will decelerate to 773 hotels with 135,294 rooms. Chengdu, at a record high 124 projects having 25,560 rooms, leads China’s pipeline. Guangzhou follows standing at 122 projects with 26,105 rooms, then Shanghai at 119 projects/22,581 rooms. Next is Wuhan and Suzhou with 111 projects/15,457 rooms and 88 projects/14,855 rooms, respectively. Also, notable, with strong room counts, are Hangzhou with 73 projects/15,647 rooms and Xi’an with 80 projects/15,054 rooms. Four of the seven cities listed above have pipeline increases in excess of 20% of their existing open and operating supply with Chengdu having a pipeline in excess of 30%. Franchise companies topping China’s construction pipeline are led by Hilton Worldwide with 454 projects/93,644 rooms. Next is InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) with 375 projects/82,358 rooms and Marriott International with 315 projects/86,151 rooms. All three of these companies are setting record pipeline highs by projects and rooms and account for 34% of China’s total pipeline. Other notable franchise company pipelines are AccorHotels with 218 projects/35,556 rooms and JinJiang Holdings standing at 214 projects/22,548 rooms. Brands in the pipeline are led by Hampton by Hilton with a record 273 projects/42,645 rooms. Hilton’s second largest brand, by project count, is DoubleTree with 59 projects/16,489 rooms. IHG’s primary brands in China are Holiday Inn Express, at a record count, with 179 projects/31,430 rooms and Holiday Inn with a record 61 projects having 15,435 rooms. Marriott International’s top brands are the full-service Marriott Hotel & Resort, hitting record highs, with 73 projects/22,068 rooms and then Courtyard with 39 projects/10,250 rooms. Leading brands for JinJiang Holdings are 7 Days Inn with 113 projects/8,931 rooms, and Vienna Hotel with 26 projects/3,300 rooms. AccorHotels’ leading brand, Ibis, is also hitting all-time highs with 102 projects/10,888 rooms, while Mercure Hotel also has a record number of projects with 58 and totaling 9,346 rooms.
Create: Dec 7, 2019 Edit: Dec 7, 2019 International NewsTechnology brands interested in being featured are invited to submit their latest innovations for the upcoming report presented by Puzzle Partner Puzzle Partner, the most trusted B2B travel and hospitality technology marketing agency, today announced that submissions are now being accepted for the upcoming Hotel and Travel Tech Game Changers 2020 Report. “We want to recognize the trailblazers and creators who help shape the future and who inspire the next generation,” explains Alan Young, Founder & CEO of Puzzle Partner. “Our industry is undergoing a sea of change on so many fronts, and this report is our opportunity to highlight those technology brands that are bringing cutting-edge solutions to complex business challenges and are helping lead transformation.” The mission of this report is to showcase the developments in the art and science of hospitality and travel technology and select those companies that stand out. Acceptance in the report is based on an impartial judging process to evaluate each submission on its uniqueness, innovation, and significance to the industry. Entries will be accepted until the end of January, and those selected will be contacted in writing. The final report will be available in February 2020. Technology brands interested in sharing their groundbreaking products and services can apply here: http://unbouncepages.com/game-changers2020
Create: Dec 7, 2019 Edit: Dec 7, 2019 International NewsWe’re unveiling Cooking on Airbnb Experiences – a new category of bookable experiences that unlock the hidden culinary traditions of families all around the world. From learning grandmas’ recipes to traditional Uzbek home-cooking, guests can now get access to 3,000 unique recipes that are usually reserved for friends and family in over 75 countries globally. Through Airbnb Cooking Experiences, we are presenting a new way to understand culture through food. Unlike typical cooking classes, which can feel intimidating or time-consuming, at the heart of every experience is human connection; people coming together to make and share a meal. Hosted by families, farmers, pastry cooks and more, local hosts can now highlight the deeper meaning behind the food you eat, teaching traditional recipes and sharing stories in intimate settings around the world. To protect the personal nature of each recipe, each experience has been vetted against guidelines inspired by Slow Food, a grassroots organization whose mission is to prevent the disappearance of local food cultures and traditions. Through this vetting process, we have verified that each host of an Airbnb Experience communicates the unique essence of every dish through their personal stories and has proven a deep knowledge of the heritage of the cuisine that they share. Celebrating the launch of Airbnb Cooking Experiences – and to find the next wave of culinary treasures – we are calling on the world to apply or nominate their favorite home cook so that we can treat them to a once in a lifetime trip to Italy. There, they will learn to refine their family recipe and cement their legacy in an Airbnb cookbook, planned for 2020. The top 100 applicants will get to study alongside experts including chef David Chang and his mom, Sherri, during one of the four, specially-organized five-day courses at Slow Food’s University of Gastronomic Sciences, located within a UNESCO world heritage site in Pollenzo, Northern Italy. Alongside workshops, tastings, field visits and lessons from UNISG professors, there will also be hands on lessons from one of the most booked hosts on the platform, Nonna Nerina, who has earned over $150,000 just by welcoming travelers to the Roman countryside to learn about her and her family’s love of pasta-making. With hosts like Nonna, it’s no wonder bookings of Airbnb’s food and drink Experiences have been growing at a rate of 160 percent year-over-year since 2018. Our new Cooking category brings together the very best of our platform with brand new Airbnb Experiences, united by new principles that ensure an authentic, local experience in intimate settings and small groups. “Ever since the very first guests travelled with Airbnb, we have realized that sharing a meal is the key that unlocks culture and fosters connection. Through Airbnb Cooking Experiences, we want to bring back the tradition of people coming together to make and share meals, and through this help preserve unique recipes that are shared within family kitchens around the world,” – Brian Chesky, Airbnb CEO and Co-Founder. Building on our partnership, Slow Food is also introducing 15 special Airbnb Cooking Experiences that perfectly align with its principles of good, clean and fair – including Walk Cook & Eat in the Amalfi Coast and ‘Let’s Rescue Food’ in Cartagena, Colombia. “It’s really encouraging that Airbnb looked to us for guidance on how to help people preserve their family recipes and become quality and sustainability advocates,” said, Paolo Di Croce, Slow Food Secretary General. “Airbnb Cooking Experiences represent a great opportunity to spread our urgent call for sustainability standards and food biodiversity protection across the globe, reaching new audiences and inspiring change in the entire food and tourism sector. We have a long-term commitment to ensure that travel experiences remain authentic and help travellers learn about local communities and raise awareness about sustainable food practices.”
Create: Dec 4, 2019 Edit: Dec 4, 2019 International NewsThis enhanced partnership enables more seamless automated hotel processes, creating a win-win outcome for Pan Pacific Hotels Group and corporate clients worldwide. HRS announced an extension of its strategic partnership with Pan Pacific Hotels Group, one of Asia’s most established hospitality companies. Great news for global #businesstravelers: @HRS_NAM and @PanPacific Hotels announce new agreement, bringing process #automation and content distribution efficiencies that benefit multi-national corporate hotel programs. #hotels #travelprocurement The renewed focus of the partnership is to explore growing opportunities in corporate travel, both globally and regionally. Singapore-based Pan Pacific Hotels Group is growing its global footprint; the Group now has properties across 29 key markets in Asia-Pacific, Europe and North America. HRS works with more than 3,000 multi-national corporations on their managed hotel programs, including one-third of the Fortune 500. “Corporate travel managers are committed to offering their travelers quality hotels in the right locations, and at the right negotiated price. More corporate travel programs count on HRS to find these options around the world,” said Frédéric Dumoulin, Senior Vice President of HRS Asia Pacific. “Beyond those elements, hotels and corporations increasingly seek more automated, seamless processes that enhance distribution efficiencies. This ultimately helps make the traveler’s journey easier. Forward-thinking hotel management companies like Pan Pacific know that building win-win partnerships such as this are vital to staying competitive.” Ms. Cinn Tan, Chief Sales & Marketing Officer of Pan Pacific Hotels Group, said: “We operate in a fast-paced world where customer needs are constantly evolving, so keeping abreast of these are critical to our business. HRS and Pan Pacific Hotels Group share a common mission of putting customers first. This partnership reinforces our ongoing goal to streamline vital processes to everyday hotel program management. We look forward to leveraging new automated technologies to better serve our mutual clients in 2020 and beyond.” Pan Pacific Hotels Group currently manages nearly 50 properties across numerous key cities including Singapore, Beijing, Sydney and London. Business travel spending in Asia Pacific totaled $615.4 billion in 2018, and is projected to grow by 5.8 percent annually through 2023 as per Global Business Travel Association estimates.
Create: Dec 4, 2019 Edit: Dec 4, 2019 International NewsInnisfree Hotels has broken ground on its latest development project, a dual-branded SpringHill Suites and Courtyard by Marriott hotel located at 2900 Atlantic Avenue in Amelia Island, Fla. The hotel company will partner with Main Beach Sojourn LLLP, carrying on a 26-year affiliation of principals associated with the former Amelia Island Care Center located on the site. The all-new hotel boasts 239 rooms including suites, a resort-style pool deck with in-pool seating, a courtyard with fire pit area and poolside bar, a fitness room, 6,086 sq. ft. of meeting space and a location within walking distance of the Atlantic Ocean. “We’ve had the privilege of being part of the Amelia Island community for the past three years,” says Ted Ent, CEO of Innisfree Hotels. “The growth and development happening on Fernandina Beach and Amelia Island as a whole is exciting, and we’re looking forward to being able to welcome even more guests to the Atlantic Coast.” This is the second Marriott property in the Innisfree Hotels portfolio, and Ent and his team are partial to the brand. “They have an outstanding reservation system, unparalleled customer loyalty program and a robust marketing strategy that spans the entire globe,” he says. “It gives us confidence knowing we will be offering a top-notch, quality product to our guests.” Innisfree Hotels was recently ranked by Hotel Business, the top source for hotel industry information according to Harvey Research, as the 40th largest hotel owner and developer in the United States. “Our recent ranking at No. 40 is a direct result of our team’s dedication to a sustainable beach-oriented development strategy, our partners and our commitment to providing fun, memorable experiences to our guests,” Ent says. The hotel is slated to open in the spring of 2021.
Create: Dec 4, 2019 Edit: Dec 4, 2019 International NewsThe thinking and analyses of benchmarking continues to dominate hotelier discussion, and the industry’s most nimble minds are not satisfied the terminology, emphasis and focus have reached any type of apex. MANCHESTER, England—Hoteliers are in no doubt benchmarking has been one of the major, if not the most major, catalysts of the last decade helping fuel hotel performance, and the data is only getting better and more involved, according to sources. Now hoteliers are considering how benchmarking might change as the industry reaches what many consider the end of a cycle. Speakers on a panel at the recent Annual Hotel Conference titled “Sitting on the bench or pressing it” indicated one goal is the analyses of rooms benchmarking, not just around the primary sale, but all the way through the profit and loss account. That changes depending on the operating business model, sources said. “At the core is the transparency of data, and doing something with it. It is output rather than the input,” said Jonathan Walker, managing director of the 40-room No. 15 Great Pulteney in Bath, England, and a former director of hotel performance and operations support, Europe, at InterContinental Hotels Group. “It is not cash from benchmarking, but the cash you are missing if you do not have it, and the ability to articulate that to stakeholders,” said Kym Kapadia, chief commercial officer at Aprirose Real Estate Investment, which in 2017 bought from Bain Capital the 26-asset QHotel portfolio for £525 million (at the time equivalent to $706 million). “We’re seeing a shift in relevance of the historic data. It is now about looking ahead, monitoring pick-up and pace and about the business on the books,” said Steven Cote, product manager at Forward STAR, a division of STR, the parent company of Hotel News Now. Nick Turner, managing director at Owners Management Group International, a hotel-management company in the lifestyle and boutique space, said even more importance has to be placed on getting the competitive set right. “Otherwise it is rubbish in and rubbish out. It has to be right on an asset-by-asset basis, and it starts with the right comp set,” Turner said. “No one understands the business better than the GM on the ground, and it takes analysis and experience and talking to people,” he added. Sources said hoteliers now are focused on analyses of revenue-generation indices, comparing individual revenue per available room with that of the comp set and seeing how that metric changes for individual hotels when the market changes. Kapadia said keeping on top of the numbers has changed enormously as the number and range of stakeholders have increased. “It can be subjective in terms of the numbers of layers of ownerships and their opinion, and you have to look at the unemotional numbers,” she said. She said hoteliers still need to understand what they are and where they want to go before they get deep into the arithmetic. “Learn from best in class and overtake them, and remember there always are a cycle and an exit,” Kapadia said. “It is so important to have feasibility on any acquisition and investment. Yes, the forward-looking data is huge for the cycle, business plan and exit. Who knows, but with some insight and rationality, you’ll have a good guess.” Hoteliers who are not part of large portfolios or multi-brand platforms still are being nimble in what data they want and how to get it. “You have to have a vision as to where the product will be pitched,” Walker said. “We do a lot of research on product we might not know. We look at location, style, size, the obvious things, but also a few extra things … the quality side, being aware and curious as to what else is happening in your market.” Unlocking potential Hoteliers need to keep up to date, as third parties certainly are doing so, Walker said. “Last year, we were looking to open a hotel in Bristol, and we had a really awkward two-hour meeting, as (the other party) knew far more than we did. Benchmarking has to be ingrained, as a deal will only be passed to the bank if all the steps are passed,” he said. Cote said third-party collaboration of data and aggregating portfolios against one can provide more comfortability. One problem with performance data is the obsession with RevPAR. “All is more advanced in the rooms product. There is a need to be more clever in the rest of the building,” Aprirose’s Kapadia said. Cote said taking meaningful information from net RevPAR, with distribution costs subtracted from rooms revenue, is difficult in a country such as the United Kingdom, where “about 70% of revenue comes in from rooms … and there is no definite statement as to what net RevPAR is.” The meaning of net RevPAR also needs standardization, Cote said. “You have to have a benchmark, which is why it is currently more blurry due to the variation of definitions. Someone has to take a stance. After all, someone must have come up with RevPAR? I do not know who or when that happened?” Kapadia said. Turner added the industry has to continue to be supportive of the data and the terminology of it, and that thinking has to be adopted by universities and hotel schools. Walker said he does not believe the franchise model will change quickly because it remains very focused on RevPAR. Paralysis Sources also said there is a danger of “analysis paralysis” due to there being perhaps too many tools to look at. “Who is to say we should at any time be happy with our current state? And then how do we turn it into an actionable strategy, especially when you have multiple stakeholders to talk to?” Kapadia added. Owners Management Group International’s Turner, who also manages the Laura Ashley hotel and tearoom brand, said metrics on leisure clubs—membership rates, attrition, cost of acquisitions—and F&B remain in their infancy, if they exist at all. He added one shortcoming is that this operational excellence often comes at the expense of creativity and communicating with customers. “A broad view is necessary, on consumer data not historical,” Turner said. “I know what is good or not good for my business. It’s easy to look at the stats and the relevant costs, but it is not good enough only to look at the lowest costs. (One also must look at) the quality and what is right for the guest,” No. 15 Great Pulteney’s Walker said.
Create: Dec 3, 2019 Edit: Dec 3, 2019 International NewsVancouver-based REIT American Hotel Income Properties completed its sale of 45 economy assets and agreed to purchase 12 premium-branded ones. The move aligns the company’s structure closer to U.S. REITs and better presents itself to investors, executives said. VANCOUVER, British Columbia—Canadian real estate investment fund American Hotel Income Properties on 28 November agreed to acquire a portfolio of 12 premium-branded hotels in the U.S. for $191 million. The move sees the Vancouver-based AHIP move further up the segment ladder and concentrate on higher margins and yielding. With this announcement, the company also said it closed its previously announced sale of a 45-hotel economy portfolio to an affiliate of Vukota Capital Management for total gross proceeds of $215.5 million. The latest deal caps off a period of restructuring for AHIP. In April 2018, the company transferred management of all of its portfolio, at the time 115 hotels, to Texas-based Aimbridge Hospitality, as part of its strategy to become a pure owner. Then in July 2019, AHIP agreed to the deal with VCM. The VCM deal, which closed on 28 November, saw AHIP exit the economy segment and funded its latest acquisition, which comprises 12 hotels and 1,203 rooms in the U.S., in Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and Texas. The largest hotel by room count is the 120-room Courtyard St. Paul Woodbury in Minneapolis. Seven assets are managed by Marriott International, four by Hilton and one by InterContinental Hotels & Resorts. Aimbridge merged with Interstate Hotels & Resorts on 25 October, although between the AHIP-Aimbridge deal and the Aimbridge-Interstate merger, AHIP renegotiated its management-fee structure with Aimbridge. In an investor update released in coordination with the agreed-to buy and completed sale, AHIP said the new management-fee structure will “strengthen (its) margins, cash flow and growth potential over the next several years.” Expected to close by the end of the month, the 12-hotel buy now gives AHIP 79 assets and 8,887 rooms in its premium-brand portfolio. Jamie Kokoska, AHIP’s director of investor relations, said the completion of the sale of its 45 economy hotels alongside its new acquisition has transformed AHIP into a “pure-play” premium-branded hotel company. The 12 hotels have been acquired at an “approximate 8% capitalization rate” and, with all built in the last five years, at below replacement cost, she said. “By selling our economy-lodging portfolio, our business has become more streamlined and efficient and allows us to focus solely on driving growth from our growing portfolio of premium-branded hotels,” Kokoska said. “We believe these transactions will also better align our company with other publicly traded U.S. hotel REITs and hopefully make our business more easy to understand for investors. Ultimately, we hope our trading multiples will more similarly reflect those of the broader hotel REIT sector,” she said. Segment shift AHIP CEO John O’Neill said in the news release announcing the deal that the “mostly all-suite” deal is the final chapter that completes “a significant component of our 2019 capital recycling program.” Kokoska said Aimbridge will likewise manage the new portfolio. Troy MacLean, equity research analyst at Toronto-based BMO Capital Markets, agreed the deal moves AHIP farther up the segment scale. “The sale and new purchase is less about a price-point strategy than about becoming more of a pure play. They like select-service hotels,” MacLean said. The hotel stock, both the bought and the sold assets, also is different in market and format, MacLean said, with the latest deal being likely an economically safer platform and one providing higher margins. “The rail hotels were in tertiary markets with basically one buyer. When the rail business declined, they really suffered,” MacLean said, referring to the assets in the VCM deal and their associated rail crew-lodging contracts that were also transferred. Kokoska said the new buy, due to close by the end of the year, continues AHIP’s strategic decision to focus on higher-quality, select-service premium-branded hotels that inherently have higher average daily rates. The focus will remain primarily on the upper midscale to upper-upscale chain scales, mostly with brands offering suites or extended-stay accommodations located mostly in metropolitan secondary markets outside of the Top 25 in the U.S. “Another target is to be in markets near multiple demand generators such as hospitals, universities, business parks and stadiums. We believe these kinds of hotels have the ability to provide strong, sustainable returns, while also being defensive in changing market conditions,” Kokoska said. “These kinds of hotels do often generate higher margins due to less frequent guestroom turnover and lower operating expenses,” she said. As of 27 November, AHIP’s market capitalization stood at $505 million Canadian dollars ($380.2 million), according to the investor update. That update also showed the revenue-per-available-room rise across AHIP’s portfolio, even with inflation being taken into account, with that metric in 2013, when its assets were all in the economy segment, being $46.15; in September of this year, excluding the 45-asset economy-segment sale, being $76.80, and for just the 12 agreed-to hotels—although the rest of the portfolio is not included in the calculation—$97. The average room count also has increased in the last six years from 80 to 115, with the 12 new hotels averaging 100 rooms. Despite being listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, Kokoska said AHIP still has no immediate plans to open its wallet for Canadian assets.
Create: Dec 3, 2019 Edit: Dec 3, 2019 International NewsExpocenter Best Western Plus is located only 5 km from the downtown area of the city and 12 km from the International Airport Henri Coanda and offers 90 rooms, including 10 suites. Addressing both business and leisure segments, Expocenter Best Western Plus three conference rooms and two function rooms with premium services for any kind of event. Traditional Romanian cuisine is served at Hora Restaurant, and international cuisine is offered by Cosmopolitan Restaurant, all accompanied by live music. There are both smoking and non smoking rooms, as well as accommodations designed for disabled persons.
Create: Dec 1, 2019 Edit: Dec 1, 2019 International NewsAmerican Hotel Income Properties REIT LP (TSX: HOT.UN, TSX: HOT.U, TSX: HOT.DB.U) announced that it has reached a definitive agreement to acquire a portfolio of 12 well-maintained Premium Branded hotels for $191.0 million excluding closing and post-closing adjustments. The 12 hotels, totaling 1,203 guestrooms, are located across the United States and will significantly strengthen AHIP's geographic presence in Texas and the Midwest. The properties have all been constructed within the past five years, are stabilized and have minimal brand mandated property improvement plans. The transaction is expected to close during December 2019, at which point AHIP's portfolio will consist of 79 Premium Branded hotels, representing 8,887 total guestrooms, that are licensed primarily with Marriott, Hilton and IHG. "We're very excited to complete a significant component of our 2019 capital recycling program by adding these 12 high-quality, mostly all-suite focused, recently built select-service hotels to our portfolio of Premium Branded hotels," said John O'Neill, CEO. "We're especially pleased with the acquisition cap rate and short closing timeline for this transaction, as the cash flow from these newer hotels will minimize the dilution from the sale of the Economy Lodging portfolio. With no major capital renovations required, the hotels in this portfolio should perform without any income displacement. In addition, the improved debt financing terms we've secured for this transaction, including interest only payments at lower fixed interest rates, will meaningfully reduce our financing costs and drive higher cash flows. We continue to believe higher-quality properties and attractive financing terms will drive better risk-adjusted FFO accretion and create value for our unitholders over the long term." AHIP intends to use net proceeds from the sale of its Economy Lodging portfolio, alongside an approximately $105 million new fixed-rate term loan to finance the Acquisition. Specifically, the facility will have a five-year term with fixed interest rates less than 4%, secured by the 12 new hotel properties. Exact debt terms will be confirmed at the time the Acquisition closes. The hotels are being acquired for approximately $158,800 per key, which is below AHIP's estimate of replacement cost. The 12 hotels in the Acquisition include six Marriott branded properties (two Courtyards, two Residence Inns, one Fairfield Inn & Suites and one TownePlace property), five Hilton branded properties (three Home2 Suites, one Hampton Inn and one Homewood Suites), and one IHG branded property (a Staybridge Suites). Eight of the twelve hotels are all-suite products and all of these brands are complementary to AHIP's existing hotel portfolio of select-service, premium branded, upper-midscale to upper-upscale properties. Importantly, all of the properties are already managed by Aimbridge Hospitality – AHIP's exclusive hotel manager, which should ensure a seamless transition into AHIP's portfolio. The Acquisition also further diversifies AHIP's geographic markets, strengthening the Company's presence in markets outside of the U.S. East Coast. Six of the new hotels are located in Texas, while the remainder are located in the Midwest (Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota and Pennsylvania). In line with AHIP's long-term strategy, all 12 hotels are located in metropolitan secondary markets that benefit from multiple demand generators and industries to support the local economies.
Create: Dec 1, 2019 Edit: Dec 1, 2019 International NewsOman Tourism Development Company (OMRAN), the Sultanate’s executive arm for tourism development has signed a term financing agreement with the Oman Arab Bank (OAB). Under the agreement, OAB will finance OMRAN with a long-term debt for the W Muscat. Commenting on the new agreement, OMRAN’s CEO Peter Walichnowski said: “Now that the W Hotel has completed construction and officially opened, we can put in place long term debt that will be financed from hotel operations. The involvement of the private sector allows Government funds to be released and used to create new tourism projects that support the 2040 National Tourism Strategy.”This agreement is in line with the objective of supporting the Government’s economic diversification efforts and increased focus on developing the country’s tourism sector, while establishing strong synergies and partnerships to aid the Sultanate’s economic agenda. OAB’s CEO Rashad Al Musafir said: “OAB recognises Oman’s potential for growth, especially with regards to tourism, and the need to further diversify the country’s economy. Subsequently, we are committed to supporting the various arms of the government in facilitating their various developments, in turn assisting them in any way possible towards achieving Oman’s 2040 National Tourism Strategy goals. This is why we are delighted to be collaborating with OMRAN, a company that has a proven track record of delivering and managing sustainable tourism assets such as the W Muscat.”
Create: Dec 1, 2019 Edit: Dec 1, 2019 International NewsGlobalData has reported that Egypt’s Sharm El Sheikh’s tourism industry can thrive with the right marketing. Following the lifting of the four-year flight ban on the resort location, companies pounced to operate in Sharm El-Sheikh said GlobalData. Particularly with some good marketing to UK visitors, the tourism economy in the area could soar. According to a GlobalData survey, 63% of UK respondents are unlikely to change their plans because of a terrorist attack or political event. This compares to a global average of 54%, showing that UK residents tend to be relatively relaxed about travel threats. GlobalData’s travel and tourism analyst, Laura Beaton, commented: “Just hours after the ban was lifted, companies were jumping at the chance to resume operations. TUI has already begun selling holidays for 2020 and easyJet will launch flights to Egypt for the first time. In addition, Olympic Hotels will offer hotels previously exclusive to Thomas Cook, which will boost business for the area and mitigate some of the issues that may have occurred after the collapse of Thomas Cook.” However, officials from the company do believe that the area must work on marketing its attractive diving opportunities. Diving company Regaldive for example is offering two days free if a dive package is booked within a certain timeframe. Beaton added: “This should be leveraged by Egypt and will prove helpful in restoring perceptions among tourists. Scubatravel.co.uk, which compiles a list of popular dive spots according to review from divers, puts Thistlegorm in the Egyptian Red Sea as the fourth most popular location in the world. The Shark and Yolanda Reef in the Egyptian Red Sea comes in at fifth place for divers looking for a more natural adventure.” Beaton continued: “Sharm El-Sheikh will quickly bounce back because it is such an iconic destination for UK travellers. Holiday-makers have been circumventing the ban by flying indirectly or traveling across land from other parts of Egypt. Now that connectivity is restored, UK travelers will return much faster.”
Create: Dec 1, 2019 Edit: Dec 1, 2019 International NewsThe total revenue of hotels in the three-to-five-star category in Oman has risen by 8%, according to statistics revealed by the National Centre for Statistics and Information. Revenue recorded was OMR155.235 million till the end of September 2019, when compared to OMR143.693 million for the same period last year. According to data, revenue in the month of September alone rose to OMR13.9 million, a 6.2% rise when compared to the same period last year. While the total number of guests recorded until September 2019 were 1.3 million, the month of September recorded 121,000 hotel guests.
Create: Dec 1, 2019 Edit: Dec 1, 2019 International News