Column: industry Tag: Hotel Industry,STR,Middle East Published: 2017-10-24 11:07 Source: Author:
During Q3 2017, hotels in the Middle East reported occupancy fell 2.8% to 60.9%, and an 8.1% ADR decrease to $145.50 drove RevPAR down 10.7% to $88.61. Africa's hotel industry, on the other hand, reported occupancy rose 4.9% to 61.4% during the quarter, while ADR rose 10.1% to $97.79 and RevPAR increased 15.5% to $60.
Hotels in the Middle East reported negative performance results during Q3 2017, while hotels in Africa posted growth across the three key performance indicators, according to data from STR.
U.S. dollar constant currency, Q3 2017 vs. Q3 2016
Middle East
Occupancy: -2.8% to 60.9%
Average daily rate (ADR): -8.1% to US$145.50
Revenue per available room (RevPAR): -10.7% to US$88.61
Africa
Occupancy: +4.9% to 61.4%
Average daily rate (ADR): +10.1% to US$97.79
Revenue per available room (RevPAR): +15.5% to US$60.00
Local currency, Q3 2017 vs. Q3 2016
Lebanon
Occupancy: +16.6% to 67.8%
Average daily rate (ADR): +10.5% to LBP251,024.45
Revenue per available room (RevPAR): +28.9% to LBP170,158.02
STR analysts note that the country’s strong year-over-year growth for the quarter was due to considerably low performance levels over the past several years, caused by political unrest and security concerns. This was the strongest Q3 for Lebanon hotels since 2011. Additionally, September marked Lebanon’s highest actual occupancy level on record for the month (70.1%).
Saudi Arabia
Occupancy: -1.7% to 55.3%
ADR: -8.4% to SAR808.49
RevPAR: -10.0% to SAR446.98
Saudi Arabia reported a considerable, 7.2% year-over-year increase in supply for the quarter, which countered a 5.4% uplift in demand (roomnights sold). STR analysts note that Group (bookings of 10 or more at one time) business was a significant driver of demand in August. Medina was the only tract in the country that recorded Q3 RevPAR growth (+2.4%), while Jeddah was the only market that recorded an increase in ADR (+5.0%). The country currently has more than 64,000 hotel rooms in the pipeline, and that should continue to affect performance levels in the short term as new properties come online.
South Africa
Occupancy: -0.2% to 63.3%
ADR: +1.3% to ZAR1,104.56
RevPAR: +1.1% to ZAR699.36
South Africa’s marginal occupancy decline was due to a 2.0% increase in supply edging out a 1.8% increase in demand. Regardless, the country posted its highest ADR and RevPAR levels for any Q3 on record. At the market level, top RevPAR increases were reported in the North West Province (+13.4%), Eastern Cape (+8.5%) and Free State (+6.9%). Among segments, Luxury hotels saw the strongest growth, with ADR up 6.0% and RevPAR increasing 5.3%.
STR provides clients from multiple market sectors with premium, global data benchmarking, analytics and marketplace insights. Founded in 1985, STR maintains a presence in 10 countries around the world with a corporate North American headquarters in Hendersonville, Tennessee, and an international headquarters in London, England.
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