Hotel biz to rise 23% in FY22 over pre-Covid period: CRISIL Ratings

Revenue, on its part, will increase 23% over the pre-pandemic level, riding on a strong recovery in business travel and continued traction in leisure travel

travel

Developers had held back on capex amid the pandemic-induced uncertainties, and while the sharp rebound in demand may spur an increase in capex

Press Trust of India Mumbai
The Indian hotel industry is likely to witness 23 per cent growth in revenue this fiscal over the pre-pandemic level, driven by a strong recovery in business travel and continued traction in leisure travel, according to a report.
Higher average room rates (ARRs) and occupancy will help the hotel industry log a strong improvement in profitability to around 34 per cent this fiscal compared to 24 per cent in the pre-pandemic period (fiscal 2020), Crisil Ratings said in a report.
Revenue, on its part, will increase 23 per cent over the pre-pandemic level, riding on a strong recovery in business travel and continued traction in leisure travel, it added.
"Leisure travel had gained traction post the Delta wave last fiscal, while business travel has started picking up steadily after a much milder Omicron wave in January 2022. This has been fuelling demand in the MICE (meetings, incentives, conventions and events) segment," Crisil Ratings Senior Director Mohit Makhija said.
Crisil Ratings believes that improvement in international business travel in the second half of this fiscal will strengthen the industry's performance, he said.
"Occupancy will rise to 73 per cent this fiscal (68 per cent in fiscal 2020), while average room rate (ARR) should increase 8-10 per cent," he added.
The report further said that the gap between demand and supply will aid the improvement in ARR.
Developers had held back on capex amid the pandemic-induced uncertainties, and while the sharp rebound in demand may spur an increase in capex, supply will take a while to catch up because of the long gestation period for setting up a greenfield hotel that will favour existing hotels, it added.
Meanwhile, organised players are increasing their footprint in an asset-light way, the report said.
They are increasing capacity by entering into hotel management contracts for existing standalone properties, which will limit their upfront capital costs and keep leverage in control.

Also Read

Twitter says waiting period for Musk's deal over after being put on hold

Japan begins 3-month energy saving period for first time in 7 years

Railways' passenger revenue in April-Oct 8 period up by 92% at Rs 33,476 cr

Flipkart launches hotel-booking service, sees travel industry gaining

Hotel industry sees growth as daily room rates, occupancies over 2019 level

UK PM Sunak, wife Akshata Murty figure on 'Asian Rich List 2022' in UK

Do not know if Sheena Bora is still alive, Rahul Mukerjea tells court

INS Trikand, INS Sumitra take part in bilateral exercise with Oman Navy

Target of 475 Vande Bharat trains in 3 years: Railway Minister Vaishnaw

Mangaluru blast case probe to be handed over to NIA, orders Karnataka govt

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Nov 24 2022 | 10:59 PM IST

Explore News