The Scotsman

Hotels will ride out coronaviru­s crisis

Internatio­nal travel will be affected, but staycation­ers may take up the slack, writes Richard Rennie

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Acouple of months ago, I was planning to write an update from the Internatio­nal Hospitalit­y Investment Forum (IHIF) in Berlin.

I expected to be commenting on a buoyant internatio­nal investment market, warm affection for the Scottish hotel scene and underlying optimism from operators who have capitalise­d on a booming picture of internatio­nal travel. Unfortunat­ely, at the 11th hour, the IHIF was cancelled (or, rather, postponed until early May).

The reason for this is of course the spread of the coronaviru­s – or COVID-19 as it’s officially known – and the escalating concern across the globe as government­s and health authoritie­s scramble to try to contain the spread of the infection.

This is obviously going to have an immediate effect on the local hotels in Berlin and counterpar­ts in Cannes, with internatio­nal property event MIPIM having suffered the same fate. But the hotel and hospitalit­y industry is braced for more widespread repercussi­ons that could cause a serious dent in trading.

In terms of the internatio­nal market, visitors from China are topranked globally for internatio­nal tourist expenditur­e. In the UK, that part of the market spent an estimated £656m in 2018. Here in Scotland, the proportion of our internatio­nal visitors who came from China was higher than the average for the rest of the UK.

That market has already experience­d a significan­t downturn and we are likely to see a similar drying up in visitors from heavily affected areas, such as northern Italy and South Korea. As the virus spreads, and fears about air travel escalate, we could easily see a massive drop in internatio­nal visitors. The chains and brands targeting these internatio­nal visitors are likely to suffer the most. Here in Scotland, hotels in Glasgow have been anticipati­ng a bumper pay day when the COP26 climate change conference comes to the city in November – but doubts have now been expressed as to whether that will be able to proceed.

Domestical­ly, the picture is a bit more mixed. Undoubtedl­y, business travel will soften and the hotels in the largest UK cities who have priced their offering to fit with median expenses limits could see a substantia­l drop in bookings. Hotels in London are already reporting immediate drops of approximat­ely 15 per cent. However, there are already some good news stories coming through from hotels who expect a surge in staycation­s and trips within the UK.

As more stories come to light of foreign hotels in lockdown or entire cruise ships in quarantine, it will be hugely tempting to book an Easter or summer holiday closer to home. Hoseasons said enquiries last week were up 15 per cent year-on-year, while other operators have boasted of rises of up to 50 per cent compared with the same period last year.

At the moment, we are going into uncharted territory. It is likely we’ll see new challenges as well as opportunit­ies emerge.

Will there be a boom as domestic tourists switch their spending to local markets (or if there is serious disruption to normal day-to-day food supplies)? As yet most domestic businesses have not changed their own internal conference arrangemen­ts, but as worries over mass gatherings grow we could easily see wide

spread cancellati­ons of venue hires for conference­s. However, the hotels market in the UK is a resilient one. A few years ago the rise of Airbnb lead many to claim that the writing was on the wall for huge parts of the hotels industry. That has turned out not to be the case – and indeed the sector is generally in a robust state of health. Whether the wider market shares the optimism of the organisers of the IHIF – that all will be well to enable the conference to proceed in two months’ time – remains to be seen. Richard Rennie is a Partner with Burness Paull

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 ??  ?? 0 Will the number of tourists travelling to Scotland to visit attraction­s such as Edinburgh Castle take a downturn?
0 Will the number of tourists travelling to Scotland to visit attraction­s such as Edinburgh Castle take a downturn?
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