According to data compiled by STR, the U.S.
hotel industry reported positive results in two of the three key
performance metrics for January 2016.
In year-on-year
results, the U.S. hotel industry’s occupancy remained nearly flat
(-0.3% to 54.0%). However, ADR for the month was up
2.8% to US$116.61, and RevPAR available room increased 2.4%
to US$63.01.
“This is the lowest January RevPAR performance
since 2010 (-7.7%) and just a poor showing all round,” said Jan
Freitag, STR’s senior VP for lodging insights. “The long run
January average is +3.2%, and the average for January between 2011
and 2015 was +7.8%. Growth rates of more than 5% are probably not
sustainable in the long run, but a bit more growth to open the
year would have been nice.”
Occupancy declined for just the third time in the last 72 months.
However, despite the lack of significant growth in January, RevPAR
has increased in year-on-year comparisons for 71 consecutive
months.
Among the Top 25 Markets, Los Angeles/Long Beach,
California, reported the largest increases in each of the three
key performance metrics. Occupancy in the market rose 6.1% to
75.9%; ADR was up 8.8% to US$162.31; and RevPAR grew 15.5% to
US$123.11.
Two additional markets reported a double-digit
lift in RevPAR: Nashville, Tennessee (+10.9% to US$67.40), and San
Francisco/San Mateo, California (+10.2% to US$176.91).
Phoenix, Arizona, host of the Super Bowl in 2015, reported the
month’s only double-digit decreases in ADR (-10.8% to US$140.96) and RevPAR (-11.2% to US$98.71). Occupancy in the market remained
steady (-0.4% to 70.0%).
The largest occupancy decline
amongst the Top 25 Markets was experienced in New Orleans,
Louisiana (-8.1% to 59.0%).
“Just like in December, RevPAR
growth in the Top 25 Markets (+2.2%) was actually worse than the
rest of the U.S. (+2.6%),” Freitag said. “That said, occupancy in
the Top 25 Markets held and dropped 0.6% elsewhere. That implies a
little more pricing power in other markets. In the larger markets,
ADR growth was basically driven by group ADR since Transient ADR
was flat. Group occupancy was hit hard, probably because of Winter
Storm Jonas.”
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