HOTEL MARGINS HIT TO RECORD
LOWS
Indian hotel ind Q2 margins
may hit 5-yr low of 8%: ICRA Mumbai, Sept 16 (PTI) Rating agency ICRA today
said it expects the Indian hotel industry's margins to slide to a 5-year low of
up to 8 per cent in the second quarter of this fiscal due to decline in revenue
per available room, weak July-September and inflation in consumable costs.
"We expect industry-wide margins for the current quarter (Q2FY14) to ebb
down to a 5-year low of 7-8 per cent on the back of decline in RevPAR,
seasonally weak July-September quarter and inflation in consumable costs,"
ICRA said in a release. With uncertain demand conditions and further supply
additions, the outlook for the Indian hotel industry during 2013-14 remains
negative, according to ICRA.
The down-cycle in the Indian hotel industry has stretched to five years (barring a brief pick-up in 2010-11), compared to past hotel industry cycles globally, which has 1-2 years of lows, preceded by 5-6 years of highs. The industry-wide margins have nearly halved over the last five years to 18 per cent as on 2012-13, from a high of 37 per cent in 2007-08, due to the industry reporting a CAGR of mere 4 per cent in revenues.
The down-cycle in the Indian hotel industry has stretched to five years (barring a brief pick-up in 2010-11), compared to past hotel industry cycles globally, which has 1-2 years of lows, preceded by 5-6 years of highs. The industry-wide margins have nearly halved over the last five years to 18 per cent as on 2012-13, from a high of 37 per cent in 2007-08, due to the industry reporting a CAGR of mere 4 per cent in revenues.
"Our analysis of 8 key cities in the country indicates an inventory of
50,600 rooms in the premium space, with bulk of it being located in two gateway
cities of Mumbai and NCR," ICRA said, adding, the inventory levels in the
8 cities for 2013-14, would go up by 16 per cent, with most of the rise coming
from Mumbai, NCR and Bengaluru. ICRA, although, expects the Indian hotel
industry to benefit in the future from structural reforms like better
infrastructure, improved law and order situation (encouraging foreign tourist
arrivals) and it would, however, need to remain focused on cost control by
trimming frills and cutting non-essential expenditure to improve profitability. The rating agency expects 3-4 per cent growth in foreign tourist arrivals
(FTA), which is way below CAGR of 6.1 per cent over last 7 years, on the back
of weak domestic demand and bleak global economic scenario. The FTA in India continues to be slow, growing by mere 2.8 per cent for the
first 7 months up to July 2013, compared to 8 per cent during the corresponding
period last year. ICRA expects higher in-bound travel and an uptick in domestic travel owing to
rupee depreciation. The hotel industry in India, it said, has resorted to several steps to tide
over the weakness, which includes deferment or cancellation of capex,
restructuring of debt, infusion of funds through equity dilution or sale of
non-core assets and project modifications.
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