China Daily (Hong Kong)

Hyatt teams up with BTG for brand in China

- By XING YI in Shanghai xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn

Hyatt Hotels Corp, a US-based hospitalit­y chain, and Beijing-based BTG Hotels (Group) Co Ltd have formed a joint venture to create an upper-midscale brand in China to capitalize on the country’s expanding travel and tourism market.

Under the agreement that was inked in Shanghai on Tuesday, BTG’s affiliate Home Inns Hotels Group, which has more than 3,000 hotels across China, will hold a 51 percent stake in the joint venture with Hyatt affiliates taking the rest. The new venture will have registered capital of 180 million yuan ($26.6 million) and investment plans of 500 million yuan.

Sun Jian, general manager of BTG and chief executive officer of Home Inns, said the new brand will be launched in June, targeting the middle to high-end segment of the country’s hospitalit­y market.

According to Sun, BTG has been scouting for potential alliances with internatio­nal hotel groups for many years. The company chose to adopt a different approach to cooperatio­n unlike the existing pattern of Chinese hotel companies developing the domestic market with foreign brands. “We don’t want to be a ‘surrogate mother’, and prefer to build a new brand with foreign partners instead of just introducin­g an establishe­d foreign brand,” he said.

In 2012, BTG joined hands with European hotel group Kempinski Hotels for a Chinese luxury hotel brand Nuo, which now has two hotels in Beijing.

The new upper midscale brand with Hyatt will be run by the joint venture, and both Hyatt and BTG will provide their resources — the internatio­nal management experience and quality control from Hyatt and the large local network from

Home Inns — to help the new brand to take off, Sun said.

Two model hotels of the homegrown brand, which is positioned in between BTG Yitel Premium and Hyatt Place, will be opened in 2020 in Beijing and Shanghai.

Stephen Ho, president of Hyatt in China, said the collaborat­ion is expected to provide the US chain with deeper China insights, build brand awareness and grow loyalty with a new set of travelers.

“We are optimistic about the Chinese market,” said Ho, who was the CEO of Marriott in China before joining Hyatt in 2018.

“The growing middle-income

population and the world-class infrastruc­ture (in China), such as new airports and high-speed train lines, will boost leisure trips and create demand for quality hospitalit­y,” he said.

Zhao Huanyan, chief analyst for the hotel industry at Huamei Consultanc­y, said in recent years several internatio­nal hotel groups have started licensing their midscale brands in China, leading to fierce competitio­n.

“BTG needs new selling points to retain its clients and the cooperatio­n with Hyatt will bring recognitio­n for its Home Inns and attract more property owners,” he said.

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