Hotel Owner February 2019 | Page 9

MONTH IN REVIEW GO ONLINE www.hotelowner.co.uk CONSUMER SPENDING Hotels defy consumer spending decline in December Consumer spending continued to fall in the month of December with a 1% decline, however hotels managed to defy the trend. This is according to Visa’s UK Consumer Spending Index, which showed that overall expenditure declined 1% year-on-year in December - the fastest decline seen since April. However hotels and restaurants outperformed other UK sectors as it experienced a 7.6% increase in spending in December, which is the joint-quickest rate of increase in the past 20 months. For the whole of 2018 Visa’s index found expenditure has fallen in eight months of the year, underscoring “a relatively weak overall picture of household spending”. Lower expenditure was largely driven by a disappointing performance by the high street, as ‘face- to-face’ spending fell -1.6% on an annual basis in December. Visa also found that online spending remained “relatively subdued”, with expenditure rising by just 0.5% year- on-year. Adolfo Laurenti, European principal economist at Visa, said: “The further decline in UK consumer spending in December 2018 is a disappointment, but not a surprise. Notwithstanding a backdrop of low unemployment and rising wages, households remained very cautious at the end of the year - as they were for most of 2018. “An acceleration in spending at hotels, restaurants and bars (+7.6% year-on- year) suggests that some categories of discretionary spending are holding up better than the market as a whole. And the modest pickup in ecommerce point to the resilience of digital channels of distribution, a favorable long-term trend that recent woes have not derailed.” February 2019 1 2 SALES GROWTH Premier Inn owner sees total sales up 2.5% for third quarter Whitbread, the owner of Premier Inn, has reported a 2.5% total sales growth for the hotel brand its its Q3 trade report. The UK business achieved a total accommodation sales growth of 3.5% in the third quarter, which group said reflected a “strong central London market and a weak regional market”. Additionally, over 2,000 new rooms have been added in FY19 so far, and the group said “occupancy remained” high at over 80%. Whitbread said it is now a “focused hotel business”, with over 800 hotels in the UK, Germany and the Middle East operating under the Premier Inn brand, and a “committed pipeline of over 20,000 additional rooms”. Whitbread CEO Alison Brittain said: “We are cautious about the macro environment for the next financial year due to increased uncertainty and continuing high inflation. Although we are confident in our ability to create value from ongoing investment in the UK and increasing investment in international growth, in this environment we expect underlying profit before tax in FY20 to be consistent with this year.” She added: “Our unique model and leading market position in the UK puts us in a strong position to capture structural growth opportunities in the UK and internationally.” 3 4 5 6 7 8 LXR properties are truly best-in-class hotels, known for their distinctive character and unrivalled service Martin Rinck, Hilton REVENUE GROWTH UK hotel market to continue growth in 2019 according to Chrisite & Co Despite “growing operational costs” and “concerns over staff recruitment in post-Brexit Britain”, the UK hotel market showed encouraging signs of growth in 2018 which looks set to continue in 2019, according to the latest annual report by Christie & Co. The report, ‘Business Outlook 2019: Navigate, Innovate, Accelerate’ forecast that RevPAR growth in both London and the UK regions would be steady, with growth of +0.6% and +0.7% in London and the regions respectively, between 2018 and 2019. Supply was also found to show healthy increases, with many of the major British cities such as Manchester, Belfast and Edinburgh seeing “strong” pipelines in the year ahead. The report also found international investment continued to be a key driver, with Christie & Co identifying capital from across the globe, particularly from European investors making up more than 50% of UK investment in 2018. Average prices also remained economically positive throughout 2018 with hotels seeing a 4% increase. Brexit was identified as a “pivotal factor” for businesses within the hospitality sector in the UK, which employs around 400,000 EU migrant workers, and Christie & Co said any changes to immigration policies “could have a notable impact”. www.hotelowner.co.uk 9