Hotel Rates Stable In U.S., Rising In Europe, HRG Survey Shows - Business Travel News

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Hotel Rates Stable In U.S., Rising In Europe, HRG Survey Shows

August 05, 2010 - 04:25 PM ET

By Michael B. Baker

Corporate-paid hotel rates in the United States were largely stable while several European cities saw increases during the first half of the year, according to Hogg Robinson Group's 2010 six-month hotel survey, which it released on Thursday. Rates in the Middle East, however, declined significantly compared with 2009 levels.

Rates in major U.S. cities—including New York, Chicago and Washington, D.C.—changed little from the previous year, according to the survey, which combines industry intelligence and actual room nights booked by HRG U.K. clients from January through June. Rates were up slightly in Boston in Los Angeles, but rates in San Francisco dropped 9 percent, the largest drop in the region.

In Europe, rates grew by 13 percent in Stockholm, by 7 percent in Zurich, by 5 percent in Geneva and by 1 percent in London. Rates in Moscow fell by 12 percent, but for the sixth year in a row it remains the most expense city in the world, according to the survey.

"A majority of the cities surveyed, although not yet in positive growth, certainly recorded an improvement in performance," HRG director of global hotel relations Margaret Bowler said in a statement. "The challenge now facing hoteliers is to increase rates in line with demand to pre-recession levels, something which many forecasters believe will not happen until 2012 at the earliest."

Rates fell the furthest overall in the Middle East, with United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman all seeing double-digit percentage declines. Rates in Abu Dhabi plummeted by 26 percent, and rates in Dubai fell by 12 percent.

Outside of Moscow, the most expensive cities for hotels in the world are Geneva, which was the sixth-most expensive last year, and Hong Kong, the 10th most expensive last year. New York and Washington were the only two U.S. cities among the world's top 10 most expensive, ranked fifth and sixth, respectively.

Bowler said that the average length of stay for corporate travelers at hotels has increased by 9 percent compared with 2009, indicating that travel policies have begun to relax. She cautioned, however, that such negotiating points as last room availability and rate-inclusive food, Internet access and other amenities could become more difficult for buyers.

"It is inevitable as the industry recovers that yield management will come back into play, and suppliers will seek to unbundle further their pricing to gain maximum revenues," Bowler said. "Even in the current market, certain cities are achieving high occupancy levels on peak nights, and HRG continues to advise clients to secure sufficient allocation in high-volume locations."

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