The recovery that began to emerge late in the
third quarter of 2014 couldnt help Thailands hotel industry
overcome a dismal first half of the year as the industry reported
a year-on-year occupancy decline of 11.3%.
The
countrys occupancy drop was primarily driven by Bangkoks hotels,
which had a year-on-year 16.2% decline. During more than
six months of the year, occupancy in the city was down more than
20% year-on-year.
Phukets occupancy dropped 5.7% year-on-year, which led to levels just slightly above
those of 2011 - this mainly driven by low-season (May through June)
decline beyond normality - and less peak season effects.
Koh Samui
held up reasonably well, with a slight decrease in occupancy of
1.6% over 2013, and the only negative effect year over year
was during low season.
The recovery that
began late in the third quarter blossomed in Q4 as numbers
dramatically turned around for Bangkok. After the dismal start to
the year, RevPAR increased by 2.5% year-on-year in the last quarter. Occupancy in December for Bangkok
was one of the highest recorded by STR Global since 2000. It was
the best Q4 for Bangkok occupancy since 2006.
"The story is
similar for Thailand as a whole. RevPAR was the second best Q4 for
the last decade. It would thus suggest that six to nine months is
the new recovery time norm for Bangkok," said Jesper
Palmqvist, STR Globals area director-Asia Pacific.
In local currency terms, ADR for
Thailand as a whole in 2014 was up 2.6% year-on-year,
with Bangkok once again proving that it is able to sustain rates
throughout market turmoil. While there were hotels that lost
significant rates, the fact that ADR ended flat year-on-year
speaks volumes to the amount of hotels firmly holding their
ground.
"It was slightly different for resort markets.
Though Koh Samuis rates for peak season arent at historic record
levels, the markets hotels have continuously lifted rates during
lower demand seasons, with less of the drastic negative rate
movements seen in the past," Palmqvist said. "This is particularly
interesting since Koh Samui has more seasonal variety than a
destination such as Phuket."
Phuket has consistently raised
peak season rates (December through January) since the reboot in
2010 and after the low season floor was raised back in 2012; it
has been sustained each year.
"One impressive market to mention was Chiang Mai, though occupancy
decreased 4.2% on a year-on-year basis. The markets
hotels had positive RevPAR growth driven by continued positive ADR
movement. This is particularly qualitative when considering that
Chiang Mai has grown rate by solid numbers for the past few years,"
according to Palmqvist.
Hua Hin was also able to hold rates
reasonably well, but Pattaya suffered more due to a 10%
decline in occupancy year-on-year.
Supply growth has continued to slow and seems to have aided
performance during the economic downturn in 2014, specifically during the second half of the year. STR Global
says it hasnt seen such
low supply growth in Thailand as a whole for 10 years, and Bangkok was the main contributing market to that trend.
ASEAN Tourism Forum,
ATF,
ATF 2015,
Nay Pyi Taw,
Myanmar,
STR,
ADR,
RevPAR,
Thailand
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