Gulf News

Difference of vision led to Habtoor split — Marriott

OPPORTUNIT­IES IN THE EMIRATES ARE STILL PROFOUND, TOP OFFICIAL SAYS

- BY ED CLOWES Staff Reporter

Marriott’s split with Habtoor City, where it once had three flagship hotels, was a result of the pair disagreein­g over their vision for the complex, the president and CEO of Marriott Internatio­nal has said.

The hotel group announced its intention to part ways with investor Al Habtoor Group, which owns the buildings on Shaikh Zayed Road, last July, taking with it the St. Regis, W, and Westin brands.

They were swiftly replaced by Hilton hotels, but under a new agreement in which Habtoor would be allowed to manage the properties and simply franchise the Hilton name.

Analysts say that this was a clear point of contention between Marriott and Al Habtoor Group, owned by Emirati billionair­e Khalaf Al Habtoor. Marriott does not franchise its flagship brands, including the St. Regis and the W, in order to protect service standards, while Al Habtoor would’ve wanted the lower service fees associated with simply franchisin­g a hotel brand, experts say.

‘Sensible step’

On a recent visit to Dubai, the head of Marriott Internatio­nal Arne Sorenson told the gathered press that there had been a divergence in vision for the three hotels.

“The owner had basically a different vision for the approach for that complex than our vision,” Sorenson said. “Certainly difference­s between franchised and managed is a piece of that ... it became clear to us that factoring in all things, including the economics, it made sense to take this step.”

The Habtoor Group continued to be a substantia­l owner and partner of Marriott Internatio­nal, regional managing director Alex Kyriakidis added. “It made sense to amicably part on this project,” he noted.

When asked if the decision to deflag 1,400 hotel rooms, the largest such incident in Marriott’s history, had hurt the company’s brand in the region, Sorenson said: “Not one bit.”

Some questioned the wisdom ■ One of the biggest points of discussion to emerge out of the $13 billion (Dh47.74 billion) acquisitio­n by Marriott of rival Starwood Hotels and Resorts has been the merging of loyalty programmes.

Earlier this year, David Flueck, Marriott’s senior vice president for global loyalty, said that bringing the technology together had been “a very challengin­g undertakin­g.” Responding to this, Sorenson said that while Marriott “knew it would be complicate­d, it was probably a little bit more bumpy than we anticipate­d. Among 110 to 115 million loyalty members, there’ll be some noise around the edges.” of placing a large hotel complex directly opposite the high-performing JW Marriott Marquis, but the CEO countered this notion. “We perform better with more market concentrat­ion.”

Marriott Internatio­nal, the largest hotel group in the world, retains a healthy developmen­t pipeline in Dubai, with five new properties expected by the end of 2018, bringing the total to 11 for this year alone.

On where the company derived its confidence from amid a subdued hospitalit­y market, Sorenson said he remained bullish. The question of supply, and concerns over rate growth, was one that had come up “repeatedly” in the Middle East over the past two decades, Sorenson said. Despite ongoing worries, he added, the industry had experience­d “continued, extraordin­ary growth.”

“The opportunit­ies in the emirates are still profound. This is a market which is extraordin­arily exciting.”

Dubai’s position as a crossroads between Asia and the West would make it an important hub in tourism for decades to come, he said.

Saudi Arabia, too, remained an important market, according to Kyriakidis.

Kyriakidis also pointed to the pent up demand of local Saudis for hospitalit­y. Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, he said, was attempting to channel the billions of dollars being spent by Saudis overseas back in to the local economy, via elaborate and expansive tourism developmen­t plans on the Red Sea coast and elsewhere.

 ?? Courtesy: Marriott ?? Arne Sorenson and Alex Kyriakidis of Marriott Internatio­nal said the hotel group retains a healthy developmen­t pipeline in Dubai, with five new properties expected by the end of 2018.
Courtesy: Marriott Arne Sorenson and Alex Kyriakidis of Marriott Internatio­nal said the hotel group retains a healthy developmen­t pipeline in Dubai, with five new properties expected by the end of 2018.

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