Bangkok Post

Marriott’s Q1 profit misses estimates

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US hotel operator Marriott Internatio­nal Inc missed already lowered estimates for first-quarter profit by a huge margin on Monday, as bookings plunged due to the coronaviru­s-led lockdowns that kept a quarter of its hotels closed.

In line with Holiday Inn-owner InterConti­nental Hotels Group Plc’s announceme­nt last week, the company said its bookings in Greater China improved in April as the world’s secondlarg­est economy gradually reopened for business.

Marriott’s shares, down 42% this year already, fell as much as 6.5% as the company reported a 90% slump in the industry’s closely-watched revenue per available room indicator in April.

“April seems to have defined the bottom (for Marriott),” chief executive officer Arne Sorenson said, as the company was affected by the Covid-19 pandemic that led thousands of people to cancel bookings and stay at home to contain the spread of the deadly virus.

Soreson said demand was, however, starting to crawl back. “As restrictio­ns are released, I think the trend line now is towards more (hotel) openings, not towards more closings.”

Marriott, which reported a 22.5% decline in first-quarter revenue per available room, would be adding thousands more hotel rooms in over the next year or two, as they have already been under developmen­t.

The company’s worldwide developmen­t pipeline totalled nearly 3,035 hotels with about 516,000 rooms. More than 230,000 rooms in the pipeline were under constructi­on as of the end of the first quarter.

“Marriott is cutting or deferring around 45% of its earlier 2020 spending forecast of between $700 million and $800 million, but any cutbacks in new investment­s would only begin to be visible in 2022,’’ SunTrust Robinson analyst Patrick Scholes said.

Sorenson said occupancy at Marriott hotels in Greater China was just over 30% presently, up from less than 10% in midFebruar­y 2020, and said that was evidence of the resilience of travel demand.

Marriott’s total debt jumped by about 12% to $12.23 billion in the quarter and the company said it had net liquidity of about $4.3 billion as of May 8.

Net income fell to $31 million, or nine cents per share, in the three months ended March 31, from $375 million, or $1.09 per share, a year earlier. On an adjusted basis, Marriott earned 26 cents per share in the quarter. Revenue slumped 7% to $4.68 billion. Analysts on average had expected Marriott to earn 80 cents per share on revenue $4.03 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? A view of the exterior of the New York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge.
GETTY IMAGES/AFP A view of the exterior of the New York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge.

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