Katrina Effects May Boost Lodging Growth

Displaced conventions plus emergency-related travel after Hurricane Katrina should bolster the U.S. lodging market over the next few months. As a result, Hendersonville, TN-based Smith Travel Research has increased its 2005 RevPAR (revenue per available room) growth projection from 7.6% up to 8.2%.

"Despite the obvious attrition from displaced business, the increase in Katrina related emergency travel combined with the relocated meetings demand to other cities will have a meaningful impact on occupancies," says Randy Smith, CEO and founder of Smith Travel.

Smith Travel has revised the following projections for year-end 2005:

*Room supply.....................+0.4%
*Room demand...................+3.6%
*Occupancy........................+3.1%
*ADR (Average Daily Rate)...+5.0%
*RevPAR............................+8.2%

Adds Mark Lommano, president of Smith Travel: "Some of our client hotels, despite being closed to the public, house FEMA workers, evacuees and clean-up crews and keep reporting revenues and occupancies to us. We conservatively estimate occupancies in hotels that were not closed due to this disaster to be substantially above average for the rest of the year. Nationally, the decrease in room supply due to Katrina's impact coupled with already strong overall hotel demand allows us to revise our 2005 year-end estimates upward."

Please or Register to post comments.

Latest poll

Total CMBS Issuance Volume

There has been $30.3 billion in new CMBS issuance to date in 2013, according to Commercial Mortgage Alert. That puts the industry on pace to smash last year’s volume of $48.4 billion and will make 2013 the busiest year for CMBS issuance since 2007. Where do you think total CMBS issuance volume will end up in 2013?

 

Newsletter Signup

AdviceIQ

Connect With Us
National Real Estate Investor Related Sites