The National - News

TOURISM Economic slowdown hits Mena hospitalit­y sector in first half

- DANIA SAADI

The Mena’s hospitalit­y sector is forecast to recover in the second half of the year from the downturn witnessed in the first half due to the global economic slowdown and an uptick in hotel supply, according to global consultanc­y EY.

“The hospitalit­y market across Mena continues to be affected by the drop in oil prices and challengin­g economic conditions, which has led to more conservati­ve spending in the government and private sectors as well as among regional tourists,” said Yousef Wahbah, Mena head of transactio­n real estate at EY, in the consultanc­y’s Middle East Hotel Benchmark Survey Report.

At the start of the year, Opec and other producers that also include Russia agreed to cap their production at 1.8 million barrels a day through to March 2018. That has muted the impact of shale producers but rising US production and poor compliance by some Opec members has failed to stabilise prices.

“Starting September, we expect to see an increase in the hospitalit­y market performanc­e in some of the MENA cities due to the Hajj pilgrimage, global forums and regional events being hosted across the region, and regional trips taken during long weekends for upcoming holidays,” according to EY.

EY’s finding are in line with figures from data provider STR Global.

Occupancy in the Middle East in the first half fell 1 per cent to 66.2 per cent compared with a year-earlier period, with the average daily rate (ADR) dipping 3.6 per cent to $171 and revenue per available room (RevPar) decreasing 4.6 per cent to $113.27.

STR also reported that most hotels in the Arabian Gulf reported year-on-year drops during Ramadan this year compared to the holy month last year.

According to EY’s figures, occupancy in the first half of the year was highest in Dubai at 79.3 per cent and lowest in Amman at 46.6 per cent. RevPar was highest in Dubai with $209, and lowest in Cairo with $54 during the same period.

“[Dubai] has continued to focus on increasing tourism by means of meetings, incentives, conference­s and exhibition­s (MICE) events, leisure attraction­s, exhibition­s and conference­s, a diverse hospitalit­y supply, and revised visa policies, which have all contribute­d to its current performanc­e,” said the EY report.

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