Los Angeles Times

Marriott and Starwood united

The $13-billion deal creates the world’s largest hotel chain.

- Associated press

Several of the bestknown names in travel are now united in one hotel company.

Marriott Internatio­nal closed Friday on its $13-billion acquisitio­n of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, bringing together its Marriott, Courtyard and Ritz-Carlton brands with Starwood’s Sheraton, Westin, W and St. Regis properties.

In total, 30 hotel brands now fall under the Marriott umbrella to create the largest hotel chain in the world with more than 5,700 properties and 1.1 million rooms in more than 110 countries. That's more than 1 out of every 15 hotel rooms around the globe.

Marriott now eclipses Hilton Worldwide’s 773,000 rooms and the 766,000 that are part of the Interconti­nental Hotels Group family, according to STR, a firm that tracks hotel data.

“We’ve got an ability to offer just that much more choice — a choice in locations, a choice in the kind of hotel, a choice in the amount a customer needs to spend,” Marriott Chief Executive Arne Sorenson told the Associated Press on Thursday.

Starwood’s guest loyalty program — Starwood Preferred Guest — was also a “central, strategic rationale for the transactio­n,” Sorenson said. The program’s members are deeply loyal to it, have generally higher incomes and tend to spend many nights on the road.

Starting Friday, members of Starwood and Marriott’s two loyalty programs will be able to link their accounts. Each Starwood point will be worth three Marriott Rewards points.

Starwood put itself up for sale in April 2015. The Stamford, Conn., company had struggled to grow as fast as its rivals, particular­ly in “limited service hotels,” which are smaller properties that don’t have restaurant­s or banquet halls.

Marriott and Starwood — like other hotel chains — own few individual hotels. Instead, they manage or franchise their brands to hundreds of individual owners, often real estate developmen­t companies.

The purchase gives Marriott more leverage with corporate travel department­s who often look for one giant chain to house all of their employees.

It also gives Marriott more power over Expedia and Priceline, the two giant online travel agencies that sell rooms on behalf of hotel companies in exchange for a commission. The hotel industry has spent the last year trying to get travelers to book directly with them instead of the travel agencies to avoid paying those fees.

There are still many details to work out.

The combined companies have 30 brands. Some have performed better than others, but Sorenson said all of them will probably survive the merger.

“I think so. Every one of them has hotels in them,” he noted.

For now, Starwood and Marriott will keep separate loyalty programs. Starwood has a credit card deal with American Express as well as close partnershi­ps with Delta Air Lines and Uber. Marriott has a much larger program with partnershi­ps with Chase and United Airlines.

“Nothing changes immediatel­y. We have to see how those partnershi­ps evolve,” Sorenson said.

Gary Leff, who writes about travel industry points and miles at ViewFromTh­eWing.com, called the 3-1 exchange rate of Starwood points to Marriott points “just right.”

“It’s one of the many reasonable and positive steps that Marriott has taken along the way as it acquires Starwood,” Leff said. “But there’s a whole lot still to happen between now and the programs actually being combined.”

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