According to data from STR, the U.S. hotel
industry reported mostly positive results in the three key
performance metrics during March 2016.
Compared with March 2015, the
U.S. hotel industry’s occupancy was nearly flat (-0.4% to 66.4%),
however ADR for the month was up 3.2% to
US$124.37, and RevPAR increased 2.7% to
US$82.60.
“After talking about the Easter shift and the
corresponding softness in RevPAR, it finally happened,” said Jan
Freitag, STR’s senior VP for lodging insights. “But RevPAR was up
2.7%, and given that we started the year with +2.4% and +2.8% in
January and February, respectively, the March data was really not
that bad. Or maybe the data was only as bad as expected and not
worse. Hitting expectations and not underperforming them is a good
thing these days. Obviously, business travelers stayed away from the Easter weekend and group occupancy was down 9.6%.”
RevPAR has now grown year-on-year for 73
consecutive months and that demand hit an all-time high in March
with more than 1.2 million room nights sold.
Among the Top
25 Markets, Norfolk/Virginia Beach, Virginia, recorded the only
double-digit increase in occupancy (+10.5% to 58.7%) as well as
the largest year-on-year increase in RevPAR (+17.5% to
US$48.55). ADR in the market was up 6.3% to US$82.77.
Los
Angeles/Long Beach, California, posted the only double-digit rise
in ADR (+12.2% to US$172.01) and was the only other market to see
double-digit RevPAR growth (+16.5% to US$147.17).
Overall,
16 of the Top 25 Markets reported an increase in RevPAR for the
month.
Houston, Texas, experienced the steepest decline in
occupancy (-9.6% to 69.2%) and the only double-digit drop in
RevPAR (-10.7% to US$77.16). ADR in the market was down 1.3% to
US$111.47.
Of the six markets to report a drop in ADR for
the month, New Orleans, Louisiana (-2.4% to US$156.65), and
Chicago, Illinois (-2.0% to US$121.98), reported the largest
decreases in the metric.
“It is worth pointing out that
supply growth in the Top 25 Markets was +1.5%, so 50% higher than
the rest of the U.S. (+1.0%),” Freitag said. “Demand grew 1.9% in
the larger metros, and 11 of the Top 25 Markets had occupancies
above 80%. Despite the large influx of rooms, the larger cities
seem to be able to hold performance quite well, and their ADR
increased 3.6%. This increase is much healthier than the rest of
the U.S., where ADRs only increased 2.8%.”
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