Editorial
Dear Insiders,
Germany breathes a sigh of relief: By the end of May, the hotel and restaurant industry will gradually begin to reopen – under strict conditions and with some differences between individual federal states. An initial overview. Restaurateurs and hoteliers are better prepared than virologists are informed about the industry. Statements made by Karl Lauterbach yesterday are damaging for business: He discriminates against the industry, refering to it as a hotspot of infection.
Despite the enormous relief as restrictions begin to be lifted, for five weeks now another vital question has been hanging in the air: Where's the bailout fund? The one which, after KfW loans, was supposed to flush cash directly into the accounts of smaller businesses? For five weeks now, this emergency rescue package has been mentioned only briefly, yet details are outstanding. By the end of May, the first ten thousand companies will probably go bankrupt. Over a million staff are already on short-time working: In February, this figure was only 173, Dehoga reports. Is Economic Affairs Minister Peter Altmaier failing to keep his word? Is he afraid that other industries will then demand something similar? I fear that this rescue will come much too late or not at all.
Alongside this call, the distribution of responsibility for rent payments remains an issue. Now the Central Real Estate Committee has ventured a new proposal for state support – something that other countries are also doing, by the way, as we learned from the interview with Falkensteiner CEO Otmar Michaeler. Of course, there are also voices against such intervention and new proposals, for instance of a cash pool in which all stakeholders are to participate, including house bank and franchisor.
As a native of South Tyrol with his company headquarters in Vienna, Otmar Michaeler tells us what he thinks about the EU, about Austrians and Germans, all of whom are now squabbling over the closed border. If border restrictions are not removed, summer business for Austria would be placed in serious danger. And to make matters even more confusing, we have the term travel warning, which is actually more of a recommendation and has many loopholes, as Fred Fettner found out.
STR yesterday presented the latest performance data for the DACH region – all hotels in the three countries are now likely to have hit bottom so that things can now only get better from here, Managing Director Robin Rossmann comforts the industry. For Switzerland, which is heavily dependent on international guests, recovery could be a very long way off. Accordingly, a consulting firm has come up with a very unconventional proposal: Individual segments could be closed temporarily and later brought back into a stabilised market.
The fact that Switzerland is struggling too is also reflected in the vague responses given by Gstaad Tourism. The alpine destination is an international luxury stronghold and obviously nobody knows where to start at the moment.
Corona is also driving digitisation, and the hot-off-the-press Fraunhofer report summarises where smart technology can already contribute to a resilient hotel.
And that brings me nicely to our HITT: At our – now virtual – think tank on 23 June, you can certainly learn a lot about the "new norms". Have you seen the full programme yet? Click on www.hitt.world where you will also find the new prices for the virtual version and the booking form.
Until next Friday.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
Tourism is finally exerting public pressure: Demonstrations, letters, criticism… Germany's federal structure is hindering the hotel industry again: Individual federal states have found their courage now to open their doors, but Austria and Switzerland have already overtaken them. Instead, Germany is making itself very popular because it has just extended the global travel warning until June 14th and the country's top minsters are no longer in agreement. The hospitality industry has been left hanging, without any perspectives!
With all due respect concerning the health of people: This behaviour of the politics is borderline and shows no sense of responsibility. On the contrary: Suspicions about buddy business are arising again. Why should professional soccer players who earn millions be tested every evening and have close-proximity contacts in order to hold ghost matches? Why should this group be privileged? This would be antisocial and inhuman. Soccer players are not relevant to the system.
Our last edition caused strong reactions, we even received a letter to the editor, and from many emails and talks, I hear: "I'm going to join the next shitstorm"! The patience of many people has worn thin.
Therefore, the following is very important for associations and entrepreneurs: Please provide the politics only with concrete, practice-oriented suggestions! Our report about hygiene standards in hotels shows how it's done: Seetel Hotels on Usedom has been exemplary, Accor, Hilton, Marriott are showing their colours globally as chains with certifications, and in Bavaria, the Munich Hotel Alliance has proactively created very concrete checklists, we are allowed to publish today. The aim is: Create confidence among guests! And in the politics.
Fred Fettner reports how Austria is tackling the announced easing of lockdown measures and he fears: Hotels open, borders closed? Also, our editors in Italy and Spain provide us with a new update on financing and easing of measures.
On Monday, the ZIA staged its online press conference and issued a 17-page position paper around hotels and hotel real estate – a very good summary of the current state of affairs in Germany. A good gesture of the central organisation of the real estate industry. It has excellent connections to politicians. And together you are always stronger. In addition, more detailed assessments of the hotel asset class are slowly being made – the basic tenor is rather gloomy, but not hopeless.
There is still wrangling about the vouchers, but Susanne Stauss summarised the back and forth. Here, too, there is disagreement whether vouchers are a boon to tour operators and consumers alike, or merely an interest-free forced loan from consumers.
The time is running, the clock is ticking. Everyone who can get involved in politics should do so. Hotels and restaurants must reopen as soon as possible. It is the only chance against the looming wave of insolvencies.
Our 3rd HospitalityInside Think Tank goes virtual. The adjusted programme for June 23 can be found here online – and you can also book it starting today! Let's discuss in this digital conference the impact of digitalization: After all, we are all moving towards "new norms" at high speed: in the operating models of both established and young chains, in personalised customer journeys and with respect to generating a customised service quality. Much of this is probably controlled by AI. All details about the programme and rates at our front page and on www.hitt.world where you can register.
The date for Expo Real is in October, and it would be one of the first to be held again since the lockdown. The trade fair in Munich is working flat out to make its events crisis-proof: The real estate fair will take place, it was officially announced this week. You are also welcome to talk to us about the joint stand "World of Hospitality"; more on page 1.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
For weeks I've been amazed at how many of you, dear hoteliers, have taken cover. Rather say nothing and sail gladly into insolvency with reduced VAT? Motel One CEO Dieter Müller calls the current VAT reduction a "bad joke". What is the point of a revenue-linked, temporary tax reduction if there is no revenue to speak of? The German Hotel and Restaurant Association has still not managed to set a new course and solve the central problem: to get the emergency aid to protect against insolvency in time...
Speaking in an interview with me today, Dieter Müller explains his idea of a moratorium, which places the costs for all parties virtually to ZERO. This principle costs nothing and brings a lot. Even the German property federation ZIA has recommended it for the real estate industry. Our LinkedIn forum was filled with positive reactions to Müller's idea, yet his letter to the government's crisis team in Berlin goes unanswered to this day.
Müller appeals to politicians, also in view of the emerging social unfairness in society. Currently, Motel One is losing EUR 20 million in liquidity each month; unlike many others, the group still has an equity buffer, but in relative terms most other companies are suffering in a similarly dramatic way.
Germany has many good, analytically strong and creative entrepreneurs. They just need to be heard! This is why Frank Stauss, a highly respected political advisor and campaign strategist in Berlin, explains to us today why Dehoga is not making progress in government circles: "The industry is always screaming doom," he says, referring here to the industry’s current tax belly flop. Instead of submitting concrete plans for the reopening, they arrive with the same old rants. "These radical neo-liberal views just don't find support today, not even in the CDU..."
Another of our articles today looks at demands and ideas on how to limit the financial disaster in the economy. Meanwhile, a tug-of-war has begun between politicians and companies about the exit plan. The voices from the tourism industry are becoming louder and more demanding. The politicians and virologists stand opposed. You can tell: We are now entering the hot phase of having to weigh up the demands of health security and economic sacrifice.
Who will be able to get their business back up and running and when? What the German government is thinking here can also been seen from the – well prepared – charts of the Competence Centre for Tourism, which also calculates revenue expectations. Yesterday, it published its second "recovery plan": Compare it with the first one released on 9 April!
We also bring you topics beyond the corona crisis: We introduce new, young brands in the Serviced Apartment sector – and most pipelines are also full to bursting. But corona will also be an endurance test for them.
The crisis is also forcing us to adapt: We have decided to give our HITT Think Tank on 23 June a digital format. This way, the topic of the future digitisation will not fall by the wayside and even more insiders can participate! We look forward to it. We have placed initial information about this on our page 1, more will follow next week, when we will have adjusted the programme and the prices. It will not be a boring webinar, I promise you.
Stay strong! And speak your mind! It is time to overcome the corona paralysis!
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
The German hotel industry is currently losing approx. EUR 750 million in revenue with each passing week. Landlords and finance partners expect rents and annuities of at least EUR 500 million each month, and 250,000 employees are already on short-time working. The whole episode is becoming more intense, and even this week's improved credit terms are still not sufficient to stop larger hotel groups slipping through the cracks.
Hotel and real estate associations are trying ever more desperately to make it clear to politicians and banks: Beds lost in March cannot be occupied twice in June! If Berlin government fails to come up with further improvements to its support programmes, the sector will run headlong into mass insolvency. Experts estimate the risk of insolvency in the travel industry at 40%, more than twice as high as in the economy as a whole!
It’s for this reason that the pressure to relax restrictions is increasing in many countries. Some are already taking cautious first steps in that direction, including Denmark, Norway, Austria and Czechia.
Worries and concerns are apparent in all conversations: If the economy is not gradually opened back up from May onwards, the humanitarian disaster will be followed this year by economic ruin even in rich countries and social unrest everywhere.
The tension is palpable. Dealing with hotels closed in this crisis is more work than operating them during normal times, Duncan O'Rourke, COO Accor Central Europe, stated in our interview today. Even the European market leaders would be pleased to see occupancy grow again, at least in June. Duncan doesn't even want to think about RevPAR trends yet. Of the 3,000 Accor hotels in Europe, around 2,200 are currently closed.
It gets even more depressing today when the still great transaction figures for Germany in the 1st quarter are compared with forecasts for the 2nd quarter and the now looming crash. The figures from the market report recently published by the German International Hotel Association for 2019 should be framed in gold.
The virus has the entire world firmly in its grip, as our summary flight over the Middle East shows. The virus scenario is repeated in almost every country in the same way, only with a time lag. And just as uniform will be the trend that follows: First, it will be local restaurants, cafés, bars and shops to begin to generate revenue again, then domestic tourism will go through the roof, while the recovery in business travel will be significantly delayed. The latter is again dependent on air travel and open borders - and on the confidence that travellers must again have developed by then. Trust and confidence will be the economy’s driving force.
On Tuesday, I watched the first purely virtual live hotel conference "Hospitality tomorrow": Allegedly 5,300 people were registered, and in the discussions I listened to for five hours, an average of 2,500 participants were online at any one time. More about the content soon, but important to me now is the message from this event: Firstly, you can get things - and thoughts - moving online; secondly, it does exist - the global tourism spirit and the common fight against the virus! It felt good to see this.
Have a good Easter break, enjoy short walks and switch off from it all. We will do the same, our ordinary Easter break will be next week, so we will be back on Friday, 24 April, with our next edition. Hopefully with more positive news.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
While the rest of the world is now fighting the coronavirus, China is getting back to normal. The hotel market is stabilizing at a low level, but now a huge project pipeline is already worsening the situation. And the first investors are already panting for distressed assets. Macy Marvel documents the decline and upswing based on numerous statistics and provides an outlook.
Various exit scenarios are now being discussed in Central Europe. Futurologist Sven Gábor Jánszky of 2bAhead records four of them, from a technologically controlled reset to the collapse of democracy. In the same report I have paired these drafts with facts worth thinking about: In addition, mrp Consult from Vienna provides well-founded calculations on various tourism markets across the world and with a view to the various target groups. Martin Schaffer's conclusion: Decisions must now simply be made with many unknowns.
The new, also extensively researched guide by Tina Froboese, Select Hotel Advisory Services, offers an orientation in the jungle of aid measures in Germany. It lists liquidity assistance and guarantees from all 16 federal states, including contact links.
Yesterday evening, following Hilton, Marriott and IHG, Accor also made an official statement on the crisis. Two thirds of the hotels around the globe will soon be closed. Despite this, or even more so now, Accor and its financially strong shareholders are now providing millions of euros to help medical staff and its own employees and partner companies in need.
So far, lessors and lessees have been less communicative. Susanne Stauss has nevertheless been able to talk to some of them, all of them were still saying they act in friendly partnership. "Off-screen", we hear exactly the opposite from the market: The tone between operators and owners/financers in general has become much coarser for a week now – since the legislator brought up the issue of rent deferrals. Dirk Iserlohe, CEO of Dorint's parent company Honestis AG, is the only one speaking in plain terms: The landlord thinks about his assets, the tenant about survival.
The Swiss hotel industry fears a collapse. A top-down projection from Monday, based on the estimated total annual turnover of the hotel industry of 10.2 billion francs, comes to a turnover loss of 2 billion francs. A wave of insolvencies seems inevitable.
In our "Snippets" today we have summarized useful information about the planned virus tracking, and in our News Mix you will also find – from today on – news that no longer only refers to projects and pipelines, but also to other commercial enterprises such as Airbnb.
Beatrix Boutonnet took part in a virtual hackathon under the patronage of the Chancellery in Berlin: Its goal was to track down ideas. One of them is a new voucher platform of the Sparkassen, a group of German savings banks, for small businesses like cafés, restaurants or bars.
Upselling is the keyword for Sabre Hospitality: they have now introduced their new retail hospitality tool, which helps to generate more sales already at the time of booking: You simply sell the hotel as an attractive destination and every extra gets a price ticket. The astonishing fact: One third of the guests would pay up to 50 euros more!
Digitization makes it possible. And even more, as Yotel CEO Hubert Viriot explains. Right from the start, the lifestyle group saw itself as a disruptor, relying on useful technology, few staff members and tech-savvy guests. Viriot spends 10% of his budget on experimenting with technology – and he still says: Business is not generated by robots, but by new open PMS and CRM!
Our interview with the Gottlieb Dudweiler Institute from Switzerland ties in with this: Its researchers see chatbots as perfect smart travel assistants. They will suggest restaurants based on your blood sugar level, or they will independently coordinate with other smart assistants for your next trip.
As you can see, there is a future! And you will need the knowledge about the digital trends after corona. We let the scientists and experts have their say as well as the pragmatic movers & shakers of tomorrow. Every Friday!
And another small note on my own behalf: This week I have contributed to a podcast for the first time. I exchange views with my fellow editors-in-chief Andrew Sangster from Hotel Analyst and Jeff Weinstein from Hotels about Corona. A first experiment for us, listen to the United Hotel Media Podcast.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
We are trapped between the garden fence and despair, with limited freedom of movement but far too much room for negative thoughts. Therefore, we are happy to spread the views of the German futurologist Matthias Horx, who has mentally rushed ahead 12 months from now. Until then, we will have learned to use technology differently, be more social, have voted Trump out of office, and have experienced smog-free cities in China for the first time. Thanks to corona.
Tomorrow, Saturday, we have "Earth Hour" again at 8:30 pm: For one hour, everybody is asked to turn off the lights and think of the planet. Corona has swiped away the topic of sustainability… But the virus will disappear, our climate problems will not, unfortunately. Therefore, we are showing how real estate experts and sustainably-thinking hotel operators at the ESG Conference in Frankfurt saw certificates critically, talked about energetic upgrades and cost-savings, and apparently showed a lot of trust in the cradle-to-cradle principle…
Stay positive: Sustainability will change the world for the better. This is future, just like the corona vaccine, which will be available in future. The wheel of economy has to start turning again soon. Therefore, it is important to slowly and carefully start the discussion about the right time for the "re-start".
Governments around the globe are fighting the virus with rescue programmes amounting to billions. If short-time compensation or loans are too late in arriving at companies and employees, corona will have won. Hotels, restaurants and cafés are only able to survive economically for a few weeks when the cash flow is cut off. Despite everything, Markus Luthe and Otto Lindner from the German Hotel Association IHA found calm words although they strongly criticised the government's programmes in their details: They fear that the industry is going to fall through the grid. On Tuesday, the lobbyists sent an urgent reminder to Angela Merkel and her ministers.
"Government money is not a horn of plenty," cautioned Martina Fidlschuster of Hotour Consulting the industry. As one of the most crisis-experienced consultants in the market, she provided a checklist for owners and operators, which helps them to prepare for their negotiations with the banks.
Corona continues to rage and is forcing angry employers to cut labor costs radically. Dismissing, granting leave or promoting? The latter is only done by private hotels, the chains execute the first. Sylvie Konzack has discovered blatant reactions. Marriott, IHG and Hyatt have reported how and where they will reduce labor costs: There will be dismissals in the tens of thousands.
As a growing number of hotels have their eye out for conversions, we asked our editorial experts about the legal framework in Germany.
However, corona might provide some other unexpected positive effects: Due to the crisis, Airbnb and Oyo are losing a lot of power, as well as OTAs. This would be a mega chance for the hotel industry to re-position themselves collectively, says Susanne Stauss. And one other positive aspect. Today, we have another non-corona article for you: the further development of Travel Charme Hotels.
In the light of the flood of information, we will be even more selective in future to provide you with a more compact overview. Please regard the second edition of our "snippets" as quick reading of mixed news. Our corona link list on page 1 has been refined and supplemented by new links. On the front page, two CEOs - Giovanna Manzi of Best Western Italy and Prof. Max Schlereth of Living Hotels from Germany -, tell us what they think about corona.
What are your thoughts about the crisis? Please write to me…
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
Things are the way they are. Within two months, the entire world is now sitting in the same corona boat. Everyone is suffering the same thing – albeit slightly time-delayed. The outcry of tourism and the hotel industry and their call for state rescue aid is more than justified. From the hotel companies in our vicinity, hardly anything is seeping out. Officially, nobody wants to say anything at the moment.
But behind the scenes, the priorities are clear: secure liquidity, cut costs and secure employees! The latter is different from Lehmann 2008, but the current KPIs of the hotel industry in Europe are the same or even worse than in 2008. I listened to an STR webinar yesterday, which presented the latest figures. Almost all countries are following the same pattern: as soon as the corona cases start to rise, occupancy and RevPAR hit rock bottom within ten days. Recovery will take longer: While China's economy recovers rapidly, the Western world will still be battling the virus.
A slight "consolation" comes from another direction: scientists are discussing how long the individual measures should be maintained. There is at least some doubt whether major events have to be cancelled in order to fight faster and better. Corona will remain with us all despite the containment strategy – and will return in several waves. 30 days of closed borders, locked hotels and an economic life reduced to zero will not stop the virus from returning.
Our task is to inform you from many different perspectives and to provide ourselves with new background information. If we include medical and scientific news in the future, you can be certain that we will rely on trusted scientific sources in our articles.
In addition, you will find a reference to useful links concerning corona on our front page today. We will constantly be expanding this international link list and filtering it again so as not to overwhelm you. We consider all articles in this phase as "snapshots", because things may change on an hourly basis; therefore, from now on, each of our articles will receive a "time stamp" at the end.
This week, it has become much quieter in Europe. The prescribed states of emergency are beginning to have an effect on the public. That is why we are also looking at the current situations in France, Spain, Italy and Austria. Macy Marvel analysed the long hesitation and the abrupt turnaround of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
And now finally something positive: Our survey among investors and funds have shown that almost all of them consider the corona "black swan" a seasonal event and are sticking to their long-term plans, even in the asset class hotel.
And finally something positive on our own behalf: We were so caught up in corona "fever" last week that we didn't mention in our editorial that hospitalityInside.com turned 15 on March 11! Our posts on LinkedIn for this anniversary have now reached about 10,000 people, and we would like to thank everyone for the many likes and the great comments about our team and our coverage. All this has only been possible thanks to you and through our subscribers! And just like on the first day, we look forward to fruitful discussions, collaboration, events and new subscriptions!
Today, we send a big thank you to our readers in 20 countries, in all offices and home offices around the world ...
There will be a life after coronavirus. More on that next week.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
Germany has a fever. High fever, probably higher than most coronavirus patients. As of this week, the whole country sees itself already in intensive care. Clear, reassuring words are what’s needed, but the German government is the world’s worst epidemiologist: no or no clear communication, hesitant responses and a tendency to leave patients to the mercy of economic forces - until last night…
Today we divide our – inevitable – reporting on the corona crisis into feelings and facts. One article contains more comments and lets the CEO of Hospitality Group from Hong Kong, Stefan Leser, speak, among others, together with our correspondent Massimiliano Sarti, who reports from an Italy on lock down. He reports on his experiences on his doorstep in Milan.
Four other news today deal with the effects of coronavirus in Austria and Spain, with corona in the increasingly restrictive Germany, with the annoying discussions regarding cancellations and the recovery of MICE business, and finally we provide current industry figures from STR and Fairmas for Germany as well as for China.
In contrast to last Friday, today I notice: Companies are increasingly turning inward, scenario testing between 'best and worst case' is in full swing. It's now all a matter of securing liquidity. And this in particular is a sore point for small and medium-sized businesses. For this reason, every "cry" from the industry, infected through no fault of its own, does good. Those cries are indeed heard, also in economic statistics and in the news. Yet this time, only determined government action can really help.
If you still believe in a time post-coronavirus: Beatrix Boutonnet has sat down with the accounting whizzes and has had the subject of real estate leasing explained to her in detail – a new possibility for hotels as well. And Fred Fettner shows why Swiss and Austrian tourism associations are missing a whole lot of marketing opportunities: They don’t really know what to do with the customer data they collect. Somehow this issue fits well with this week.
If you do not get emotional support from your doctor or family during these times: Treat yourself to a wellness holiday! There you’ll find "Social & Emotional Support".
Stay healthy.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
It is frightening to see how, within the space of just one week, educated society launches itself headlong into a self-made crisis. Since the ITB was cancelled last Friday, all hell has broken loose. Yes, coronavirus is also able to travel and is multiplying. But must all events really be cancelled? Of course, responsibility for employees is important. But so is not panicking: In Germany last night, there were 482 officially confirmed cases of corona-infected persons and zero deaths. To put this in context, in the current winter season, there have been 98,442 flu infections so far and 161 deaths. Yet nobody says a word about this.
Four editors from our team have been doing research since last week, have spoken to many people and companies and even went to Berlin – where not everything was cancelled. Others were suddenly live online with their presentations: The cancellation of the trade fair will give a significant boost to efforts to move things online.
We asked 11 hotel groups – from Accor to Yotel – how they react in terms of cancellations and what the current business situation is. Most are pessimistic and an IHIF insider reports that all IPO plans and real estate transactions have been rigorously put on hold. Standstill looms. "Yet cutting costs and hoping for the best is not a strategy," this insider criticises.
Others have sought out lawyers, which is why we asked a Munich-based law firm to shed light on the topic of "force majeure and legal consequences". mrp Hotels has also compiled tips exclusively for us for owners and operators on how to deal with the crisis in the right way.
Quietly, the ITB responded to a user's question on Facebook about compensation for exhibitors: Yes, it will refund entrance tickets and the advance payments for the stand rental fee. Meanwhile, we once again approached the responsible health authority in Berlin for the reason for the cancellation. We were told "the risk of the virus being introduced and spread is inherent in such a large exhibition with a high density of people and insufficient ventilation". There was no response from the ITB as regards that keyword ‘ventilation’. Now it can be speculated further...
The German Travel Analysis makes little sense this week. Its forecasts are based on "outdated" information from the end of January 2020. According to its findings, Germans have not lost their desire to travel... Speaking to my circle of friends though, things sound very different at the moment.
An American consultancy describes the extent of the global impact for quoted hotel chains. Let's be happy that 2019 was still a mega-year for transactions, and that Kempinski will be able to make massive investment in the new Mega Park Universal Resort Beijing in China – as manager of a total of over 6,000 rooms.
There is news other than coronavirus, fortunately. Romantik Hotels cancelled its conference on Monday in Frankfurt, but still told us why chalets, lodges and B&B hotels should now also be "romantic".
We won't be able to avoid following developments surrounding covid-19. But you should only get infected with the hospitalityInside "virus".
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems, Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com
Dear Insiders,
Since this week, it is hard to remain calm when it comes to the coronavirus. Since yesterday, first cancellations of exhibitors and visitors at IHIF Berlin have become public, even for the MIPIM in Cannes. Amongst them are renowned names such as Invesco, CBRE and HRS. ITB will probably not be able to evade the pressure, especially politically: Today, Messe Berlin has an appointment with the German Federal Ministry of Health and the Federal Ministry of the Interior, Building and Community. The highly explosive question is: Will ITB be cancelled or not?
The fear spread by the "travel-keen" COVID-19 is no longer controllable. The silent companion, which multiplies at an incredible speed, awakens primal fears in humans. The cancellation of the companies shows: It is not so much the fear of the virus group that dominates, but rather the fear of being potentially put under quarantine. The consequences for economy and tourism have become clearly visible now: from tumbling stock exchange values of hotel chains over cancelled flights of airlines to adjusted travel routes of cruise ships.
Our two correspondents in Italy and Austria, Massimiliano Sarti and Fred Fettner, describe the events in their regions and they have gathered facts. The hotels in Northern Italy are experiencing massive cancellation waves, even if they are not located in the near proximity of the trouble spots. Experts say: The first quarter 2020 is lost from a tourism viewpoint.
The coronavirus has thus become a global game changer. Therefore, it dominates our today's edition. Nevertheless, we should be happy that Europe's hotels were still able to increase their asset values last year. And that owner, operator and franchisor will gather at one table for the first time and discuss their common goals for sustainability; this is new and good. And we gathered more news from the world of sustainability for you.
And more chains can be happy about good annual results: Barceló, Best Western, Marriott, Meliá, NH and Radisson Hotels. However, Meliá Hotels have no reason to celebrate the EU Commission's decision to sanction the group for depriving shopping consumers of better offers.
Will we see each other in Berlin? A lot can happen until Monday or Wednesday. Our editorial team is traveling to Berlin –"crisis coverage" is ultimately part of our job. Masks and disinfectant sprays are ready to go. The HITT Breakfast on Wednesday remains part of our Berlin week and will take place.
With the trade fairs in spring, we are already thinking about autumn again. Until 15 March you can still enjoy the early booking conditions for the "World of Hospitality" at Expo Real 2020 in October. You can also benefit from our networking at executive level, ask for smaller, larger and individual exhibition tables and seats. The new 2019 model has proven itself once again. All information about it on our page 1.
Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems, Editor-in-chief
Your opinion? maria[at]hospitalityInside.com