San Antonio Express-News

Work-related travel may take a few years to recover.

Especially for airlines, the clientele might not return for quite some time

- By Jane L. Levere

While business travel evaporated in a flash when the coronaviru­s hit, it may take two to three years for it to fully recover — far longer than many travel experts initially predicted.

Even that timeline, said Henry Harteveldt, president of Atmosphere Research Group, a travel market research firm in San Francisco, depends on “the broader economy, the industry a firm operates in and demand for its products or services, as well as the public health environmen­t.”

And two to three years may be too optimistic — at least for a recovery by the major airlines.

Michael Derchin, an airline analyst, described the effect of the coronaviru­s pandemic on carriers as “Sept. 11 and the Great Recession on steroids.” He estimated that it could take airlines seven years, if not longer, to recover.

While business travelers make up about 10 percent of all passengers on the major airlines — including American, Delta, United, Lufthansa and Singapore — they generate half the airlines’ revenue, Derchin said. And Harteveldt estimated that business travelers were responsibl­e for 55 percent to 75 percent of major airlines’ profits worldwide.

Not only do business travelers buy more expensive and profitable tickets, they also are more likely to hold airline credit cards

and buy airport lounge membership­s, among other services.

As for hotels, business travelers generate about 70 percent of Marriott’s and Hilton’s global revenues, said Robin Farley, lodging analyst at UBS. She predicted the common measure of hotels’ financial health, revenue per available room, wouldn’t return to 2019 levels until 2023 or 2024.

Michael Bellisario, lodging analyst for financial services firm Baird, also doesn’t see revenue per available room recovering until 2023 at the earliest, he said. He added that he believed large, urban U.S. markets, which generally contain bigger, more profitable hotels, would lag behind smaller ones.

Marriott is seeing a slow return of domestic bookings, though many are by leisure travelers in vacation destinatio­ns. It said about 70 percent of its corporate clients worldwide were expected to ease or lift restrictio­ns on employee travel within the next three months.

The car rental industry perhaps is the brightest spot among travel suppliers. The average length of business travel rentals at Enterprise, National and Alamo has risen recently, said Donald Moore, senior vice president of business rental sales and global corporate accounts at Enterprise Holdings, the brands’ parent company.

Some business travelers are keeping cars up to seven days, compared with less than three days before the pandemic. They’re driving distances — like from St. Louis to Chicago — that they previously flew, Moore said.

Recent polls also raise questions about the timing of a rebound in business travel and its possible replacemen­t by virtual meeting platforms.

In a survey by Institutio­nal Investor magazine last month, more than half of the chief informatio­n officers, portfolio managers and other investment decision-makers said they didn’t expect to travel again until November and December, at the earliest. And 93 percent of the more than 300 global companies surveyed in May by the BCG Henderson Institute, the research organizati­on of the Boston Consulting Group, expected to permanentl­y change “remote working and meeting policies,” while 66 percent anticipate­d permanentl­y changing travel policies.

Among the challenges with resuming business travel are the varying guidelines put out by airports and airlines. For companies to be comfortabl­e sending employees on business trips, “there have to be somewhat consistent, clearly communicat­ed guidelines,” said Mike Janssen, global chief operating officer and global chief commercial officer of BCD Travel, a travel management company.

“If I’m flying to Reno and connecting in Denver,” he said, “I may not run into the same rules at each airport, and I don’t know what to prepare for. I can’t determine if there’s risk, which will keep me from wanting to take that trip.”

Also potentiall­y dampening business travel is the prospect of a lawsuit if a traveler gets sick. Janssen said he had heard “plenty of talk” about liability waivers that would protect companies from being sued, and they’re the source of debate in individual states and on Capitol Hill.

“The threat of litigation will potentiall­y prevent some companies — even ones that are going to great lengths to exercise caution and safety protocols — from restarting their travel programs as quickly as they’d like to,” he said.

Similarly, Harteveldt said that until companies were confident about their legal responsibi­lity to protect the health, safety and well-being of their employees, “they won’t want to take the responsibi­lity and risk of sending them back on the road.”

Companies, he said, “will need to feel confident it will be easy to travel to a destinatio­n; that there’s a safe, clean and healthy environmen­t created by airlines and airports; that accommodat­ions are safe; and that employees can quickly return home if there’s a spike in the disease or a shutdown at either end.”

Adding to the complicati­ons for Americans is the European Union’s decision to bar travelers from the U.S., as well as recent decisions by England and Scotland to maintain their 14-day self-quarantine requiremen­t for U.S. travelers, even as they ended it for dozens of other countries.

In the U.S., some states are requiring quarantine­s for travelers from other states where virus cases are rising. Chicago imposed similar rules last week.

Michael Premo, chief executive of the Airlines Reporting Corp., which settles ticket transactio­ns between airlines and travel agencies, said countries’ borders would not fully reopen until there were a vaccine and treatment for the virus, as well as “more stringent travel protocols.”

“Until internatio­nal travel returns somewhat to normal, it will put a big damper on corporate travel activity,” he said.

In the meantime, the business travel lockdown has an upside for Michael Chang, a health care technology consultant in Robertsdal­e, Ala.

Chang, who before the pandemic spent five days each week at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, has been working from home since early March and will continue to do so at least until the end of August.

Although he misses seeing colleagues at the center and accruing frequent flyer miles on Delta Air Lines and loyalty program points at Hilton and Marriott — which he uses toward family vacations — he said working from home and spending time with his wife and four children “definitely outweighs not getting” the miles and points.

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 ?? Cayce Clifford / New York Times ?? Business travel evaporated when the pandemic hit, and it could take longer than what initially was predicted for it to recover.
Cayce Clifford / New York Times Business travel evaporated when the pandemic hit, and it could take longer than what initially was predicted for it to recover.
 ?? Smiley N. Pool / Tribune News Service ?? United, Delta and Spirit Airlines planes are seen at Dallas-Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport. Some business travelers now are opting to drive.
Smiley N. Pool / Tribune News Service United, Delta and Spirit Airlines planes are seen at Dallas-Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport. Some business travelers now are opting to drive.

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