San Diego Union-Tribune

AIRBNB POSTS MUCH SMALLER Q1 LOSS, REVENUE DOUBLES FROM 2021

Strong demand for bookings during summer, holidays

- BY DAVID KOENIG

Airbnb sharply narrowed its first-quarter loss to $19 million, as the rebound in travel after two years of pandemic caused bookings to jump and revenue to rise 70 percent from a year ago.

The short-stay homerental­s company predicted Tuesday that revenue in the second quarter will top Wall Street expectatio­ns. It said bookings are strong for summer and the year-end holidays, and that internatio­nal bookings by Americans are running ahead of their prepandemi­c pace.

“People are more confident booking travel further in advance, and we’re seeing strong demand for summer bookings and beyond,” CEO Brian Chesky said on a call with analysts. “We are also seeing guests return to cities and cross borders at, or even above, pre-pandemic rates.”

However, rising prices that have long helped Airbnb may be easing. The company said average daily rates rose only 5 percent from a year ago because there were more urban rentals with relatively lower prices, and rates in the second quarter will be flat from a year ago.

Still, Airbnb forecast second-quarter revenue of between $2.03 billion and $2.13 billion — above analysts’ predicatio­n of $1.96 billion, according to a FactSet survey.

Chesky’s remarks echo comments from U.S. airlines and other travel businesses, which expect revenue to surge this summer as people resume traveling after being cooped up much of the past two years. Expedia CEO Peter Kern said Monday that his company was “feeling very good about a summer recovery that should be very robust.”

Airbnb said the possibilit­y of future COVID-19 outbreaks, the war in Ukraine and inflations pose risks to its business.

Last week, Airbnb said on its website that it was tightening its cancellati­on policy — it will no longer accept “COVID-19-related circumstan­ces” as a reason for a refund for bookings made on or after May 31.

The company said it was making the change because of widespread vaccinatio­ns in most of the world and “this new way of living” with the virus.

Airbnb said nearly twothirds of listings on its site let visitors cancel at least five days before check-in and get a full refund. It also said consumers can filter a search to find listings that allow free cancellati­ons. Airbnb suggested that customers consider travel insurance — a product that the company plans to sell “in the coming months.”

Earlier in the pandemic, Airbnb benefitted by offering consumers the chance to work from somewhere other than home or office. Bookings surged to less crowded places like beach and mountain towns, and long-term stays increased.

The first-quarter loss was a sliver of the $1.17 billion loss that Airbnb suffered a year earlier, when it took $782 million in write-downs on loans and office space in San Francisco.

Revenue rose to $1.51 billion, 80 percent higher than in pre-pandemic 2019. That was driven by more than 100 million nights and experience­s booked, a quarterly record. On a per-share basis, the loss was 3 cents. Analysts expected the company to lose 25 cents per share on revenue of $1.45 billion, according to FactSet.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY AP ?? Airbnb, the lodging-reservatio­ns company, said Tuesday that while it lost $19 million in the first quarter, that was much better than the $1.2 billion loss it suffered in the same quarter a year earlier.
PATRICK SEMANSKY AP Airbnb, the lodging-reservatio­ns company, said Tuesday that while it lost $19 million in the first quarter, that was much better than the $1.2 billion loss it suffered in the same quarter a year earlier.

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