Hotel market expected to recover next year

HCM City (VNS/VNA) - The
hotel market in Vietnam this year is expected to face a severe decline in
room occupancy due to the COVID-19 pandemic and will not recover until
next year, industry experts have said.
Savills Vietnam said the COVID-19 crisis had seriously disrupted the
economy, especially the tourism sector and hotel market.
Many hotels have either suspended operations or
temporarily closed to cut costs, and have retained only key personnel
to prepare for reopening.
These moves were done to offset the revenue decline in the short
term, but many hotel owners are still uncertain about how long it will take for
tourism demand to rise again.
Savills said the global economic impact caused by the pandemic would
make it more difficult for a full recovery of the hotel industry this
year. “Full recovery is likely to take place
in 2021,” Savills said.
Domestic tourism demand, especially from young travellers, will play an
important role in the recovery of the hotel industry, it said.
A report from CBRE Vietnam said the hotel market in Hanoi has shown more positive signs than
in HCM City.
The four- and five-star hotel segment in Hanoi is expected to recover more
quickly when international businesses resume normal operations, with
hotels in Đống Đa and Ba Đình districts preferred by customers.
Domestic guests and international visitors from Northeast Asia will also play a
role in the recovery of the hotel market in Hanoi after the outbreak is under
control.
For the hotel market in Hanoi, if the epidemic is contained by June, the
average room rate this year will decrease by 8-13 percent and the occupancy
rate will drop by 46-51 percent compared to last year, according to CBRE Vietnam.
If the epidemic is contained in September, the average room rate will
decrease by 15-20 percent, while the room occupancy will fall by 50-55 percent
compared to last year.
For the hotel market in HCM City, CBRE Vietnam forecasts that if the pandemic
is controlled in June, the average room rate this year will fall 10-15 percent,
and the room occupancy will decrease by 40-45 percent compared to 2019.
If the epidemic is controlled by September, the average room rate will
decrease by 17-22 percent compared to 2019, the room occupancy is also expected
to drop by 44-49 percent over the last year.
The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism expects a slow recovery
post-COVID, and has created two scenarios for the tourism sector this
year.
In the first scenario, the number of international arrivals to the country
is expected to decrease by 70 percent this year compared to 2019 if the
outbreak is contained in June.
In the worst-case scenario, the number of international visitors will
fall by 75 percent if the pandemic is controlled by September.
“In any scenario, this year will see an unprecedented drop in terms of tourist
volume, and consequently a plunge in occupancy levels at hotels. The
possibility of a global recession due to the outbreak will also negatively
impact the hotel market,” the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism
said.
Mauro Gasparotti, director of Savills Hotels Asia Pacific, said: “Vietnam
hospitality has been affected and this will likely continue into the
foreseeable future. However, the hospitality industry is likely to see the
fastest and strongest turnout when compared to other sectors.”
“The country’s high reliance on local travellers and the Chinese and Korean
markets could turn out to be an advantage as these groups are expected to
be some of the first who are able to travel again,” Gasparotti said.
Vietnam suspended flights from China at the end of
January and from the
Republic of Korea in early March. At the end of March, all
international flights were suspended.
With travel restrictions, social distancing measures and reluctance to travel
due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Vietnam saw only 3.7 million international
tourist arrivals in the first quarter, a year-on-year drop of 18.1 percent,
while the number of domestic travel trips also saw a decrease of 18 percent
year-on-year.
The Vietnam National Administration on Tourism estimated a loss of 5.9-7.7
billion USD to the
country’s tourism from February to April.
Hotels, tour operators and travel agencies were severely impacted during this
period. Many hotels had to reduce staff working hours and lay
off staff, or temporarily close./.