Editorial

Editorial

Editorial: The new think tank and change in many facets.
24.11.2023

Dear Insiders, 

Today, we begin with the pleasant, inspiring topics. First of all: After six years of HITT in Berlin, we are moving the Think Tank to Amsterdam! Save the date for 17/18 June 2024! The Dutch metropolis stands for rethinking, lateral thinking and openness. The perfect setting for the HITT community to develop visions and make new friends away from the day-to-day routine. This time, we won't be on the water, but right by the water. And in an unusual location in the very centre of the city. 

Ping pong of the giants. And a hotel hero.
17.11.2023

 Dear Insiders,


The ping pong game between Choice Hotels and Wyndham continues - and could probably drag on until May. CEO Pat Pacious is resolute, his Wyndham colleague Geoff Ballotti is also sticking stubbornly to his NO and appears relaxed. Sarah Douag has analysed the situation exactly four weeks after the hostile takeover bid by Choice.

Brand and investment clouds
10.11.2023

Dear Insiders, 

Right next to the World Trade Center Memorial in New York there is a hotel that is neither a Motel One nor The Cloud One. All the same, the latter is written large above the door. The Munich-based budget design group, which celebrated its US-market entry eleven months ago, is behind it all. Most of us love Motel One's fresh design, the egg chairs, the Italian long sofas, and The Cloud One is supposed to be even better than all that…

Straight talk. Not only from H World and Deutsche Hospitality.
3.11.2023

Dear Insider,

We continue this week with our CEO interviews: After Schörghuber Holding and Premier Inn, Oliver Bonke explains to us today the changed strategy of Deutsche Hospitality and its Chinese parent company H World (formerly Huazhu).

Premier Inn, Schörghuber/Arabella/Rosewood: The giants and the day-to-day
26.10.2023

Dear Insiders,

Two big companies are the focus of our attention today: Premier Inn UK and Germany, and the Munich-based Schörghuber Group with its hotel operator Arabella Hospitality and the first Rosewood Hotel in Germany, which opened on Wednesday.

Choice, Wyndham, Refugees, Kempinski: Exciting times
20.10.2023

Dear Insiders,


What a week! A battle of David against Goliath: The world's second largest franchisor (Choice) wants to acquire the largest (Wyndham). Now the poker between lawyers begins. The question is whether Wyndham is currently worth only $7.8 billion or significantly more. We already provided detailed coverage on Tuesday/Wednesday via Breakings News and a further update.


It's all very reminiscent of Marriott and the 2016 bid from state-controlled Chinese insurance company Anbang, which tried to prevent Marriott from buying Starwood hotels. At stake in this battle was $12.3 billion. Eventually, the Chinese government put an end to such ambitions.


Now, two publicly traded American giants are facing off, and no government is going to call the companies off this time. After all, profit first is the American economic credo. It's getting exciting.


As luck would have it, we recently had an interview with Wyndham CEO Geoff Ballotti and were set to publish it today anyway. We do that now with especial pleasure, given that Geoff reveals many details about the franchise model and how more can easily be made out of the 9,150 hotels worldwide. He talks about the fees used to motivate owners and new brands like Vienna House that bring in new guests. The interview now takes on a special flavour with the takeover game in the background, perhaps showing that Choice Hotels will not have an easy time of it after all.


Another drama is unfolding in the midst of the Dutch hotelier family, the Van der Valks. Refugees are more profitable that tourist, one nephew discovered and cashed in. Professional companies earn millions because they see refugees as cash cows and are able to charge governments additional 100 euros per night. Hotels, holiday parks, cruise ships and others are all in on the game. Sarah Douag describes the family squabble that became public in court, shining a spotlight on a mega-moral issue.


Sarah also takes up ethical and moral issues with her short story for homeless people, to whom Dutch hoteliers open their doors - in stark contrast to America, where in Los Angeles there is a public debate about whether the homeless can be accommodated in the hotel alongside "normal" guests.


There is one thing that Dutch hoteliers are not happy about at the moment: they are complaining loudly about the tax increase for every guest from 2024: from 7 to 12.5%! The city wants to control overtourism this way, but the MICE sector will be hit the hardest. The waves are running high.


Owners and developers would also like to make money, but here through serious business, more specifically though emission-free existing real estate and its increase in value. The panel at the Expo Real hotel conference with Rubus Development, Art-Invest Real Estate, B&B Hotels and PKF hospitality showed that it works. All the same, a multitude of little things and the ever-present bureaucracy frustrate such ventures in practice. It was a very honest discussion about costs, wood modules, heat pumps, lousy communication, and an appeal to owners as well as to operators: Sit down together at last!


Premier Inn has published its H1 and MHP Hotels its Q3 figures. On the new website (Home), we now publish the balance sheets of the chains as soon as they become available. And before we start: On the universally accessible pages you will also find current and diverse news, this week on a planned underwater train as well as the next Hospitality Symposium in Heilbronn, and more.


Otherwise, Accor has been chasing MICE trends, and Hilton has again been researching the needs of different generations of travellers. Not everything is new, but there are a few numbers accompanying the publications. Every Friday we also publish personalia and our News Mix; there, among the little articles, there’s perhaps big news for you.


One personalia you’ll miss today: Kempinski CEO Bernold Schroeder, otherwise rather publicity-shy, announced the day before yesterday in the Süddeutsche Zeitung that he will not extend his contract, "surprisingly", according to the newspaper. Following a little deeper research yesterday, I can only say: A surprise is different. We'll stay tuned and will filter out the important news. We are no copy cats.


With us, you'll certainly not get bored! Today is your last chance to participate once again in our Investment Barometer. Just click here! 


And again, the direct link to our new website! Behind the scenes, things are still a bit bumpy, as usual. But that’s no reason to shy away from contacting us if you have any problem logging in.


Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems
editor-in-chief



ESG critique, cyber nightmares, barometer, diverse news and a look ahead
13.10.2023


Dear Insiders,

The discussion on finance and the EU taxonomy requirements at the Expo Real hotel conference involved some very expert participants. Some names will not be known to everybody (Jean-Jacques Morin/Accor, Ufi Ibrahim/EEA, Manuel Ehlers/Triodos Bank), though others will certainly be familiar (Andreas Ewald/E&V and Roland Paar/Soravia). All of them wish to go down the ESG path together. If, yes, if the politicians finally manage to clearly regulate the financing standards! There was a lot of criticism on this point. 


Everyone wants to set out into this new era, but they are being thwarted. Ufi Ibrahim from London did his best to provide motivation, to take away the fear of ESG: "It's simple, it's business in a smart way!" 


Incidentally, this clear language ran through all the conference panels. We will summarise all of them over the coming weeks. For the first time, the Hospitality Industry Dialogue was dedicated to just a single topic. And the stream of visitors showed that it was high time to communicate more about sustainability. I, for one, still saw many sceptical faces in the hall though. At the other extreme though, the first masters of greenwashing were also noticeable. 


The next few years will show who has understood the challenge ahead and how much of it has been implemented. And that goes for those who still need to look up the word cybersecurity. I hosted a panel on this topic at Expo Real 2017 (!). Now, it’s hitting one hotel group after the other. Quite arbitrarily. 


Sarah Douag took a broad look at the issue of cyber-attacks, grilled Booking.com and heard from experts: AI and other innovations à la ChatGPT will make hacking attacks even more refined in future. 


Motel One gave us a brief statement on the status quo following the cyber-attack it suffered at the end of September. Alexander Fitz, the CEO of H-Hotels, and his team were unlucky enough to fall victim to an attack in December 2022. "A nightmare," he says. Within 10 minutes, 90% of the front office system was scrambled; after that, employees were reduced to pen and paper for months. Thank you, Mr. Fitz, for providing invaluable details and advice on the experience to your colleagues today! 


The sector is certainly experiencing ups and downs these days, as reflected in today's issue. What's the surprise of the week? a&o Hotels is being sold for €800 million - as we predicted at the end of March. Insiders confirm this and CEO Oliver Winter did not want to deny our question. In a few weeks, it will be official. 


How was the 3rd quarter in Germany? Transactions are at a standstill. Expansions? More and more hotel groups from Spain want to conquer Italy. ESG & Procurement? Accor, Hilton, IHG, Marriott and Radisson want to form a purchasing syndicate in future and check their suppliers according to common specifications. New fish in Berlin.... There will be none.... The mega-aquarium at the Radisson Collection Hotel will not be rebuilt. Also because it is now clear: There was no clear cause of damage. 


And what else do we have today? As always, the magazine features personalia and a news mix from the real estate market. And on our new public pages you will find a diverse selection of news including: Guide Michelin is now expanding into hotels, Berlin will soon host Germany's first sustainability summit, TUI is building a digital hub in Portugal, and a clever company has invented cement-free concrete block....


At the end of Expo Real week, we also have a personal message: On the "Expo Real" page, HospitalityInside says thank you! We also provide a retrospective and look ahead for 2024, including testimonials from our co-exhibitors. We have also added some nice motifs to the picture galleries from last Friday (start page).


Stay connected with us - also by clicking on our Investment BAROMETER! The online tool is always available and comes with a gift: we are giving away a brand-new book with questions and answers about sustainability. The key to the book is obtained by answering these questions on investments!



Till next Friday! 


Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems

Chief editor




The Expo Real conclusion for the hotel industry: Moving forward with joy and caution
6.10.2023

Dear Insiders, The Expo Real ends this afternoon and the hotel industry is probably the only sector that will go into the weekend with a smile on its face. From the very first day, there was a large crowd of hotel exhibitors, which thinned a little yesterday, but the conclusion was uniformly positive: fewer visitors, but higher-quality discussions.

No need for crisis mood in the hotel industry
29.9.2023


Dear Insiders,

Will Expo Real next week be a crisis trade fair? For the asset class Hotel, the sun should certainly shine brighter than for offices, shopping centres or the residential sector. "Hotels are unfairly criticised," says a real estate appraisal expert at a time when devaluations are again rearing their heads. But Birger Ehrenberg warns - everyone - not to panic. For eight years, until June 2022, he was Chairman of the Board of the German Association of Real Estate Investment Experts (BiiS). He compares the current situation on hotel real estate market to the game Mikado: In this market, it’s very much a case of whoever moves first loses.


The numbers expert identifies opportunities and risks for hotel investors and operators, knows the connections between concept and personnel costs, and is aware of the various burdens. Still, he says: There is no solid evidence for massive price and value corrections. Beatrix Boutonnet interviewed him intensively and Ehrenberg concludes with four pieces of advice for those active in the hotel sector.


Claudia Sunderkamp and Philipp Linder from Hotour Hotel Consulting also advise increased sensitivity and case-by-case consideration in the hotel industry, and call on investors, operators and asset managers - of whom there are more and more on both sides - for more transparency and communication. And they illustrate with the use of two charts with two different types of hotels that there are several ways to a positive result. Only one thing must never change: a reasonable rent. Susanne Stauss conducted the interview with the two managing directors.


I also found Peter Krueger, CEO of TUI Hotels, an interesting person to talk to this week. He is an investment banker and M&A expert and has pulled TUI out of the corona-induced misery. He, too, will be at Expo Real and will participate at the Hotel Conference, in which all the panels will revolve around sustainability. What is the strategy behind this hotel company, which today has 420 hotels and will soon have 600? The power vehicles behind this are joint ventures, investment partnerships including the company's first own fund, and flexible distribution, even tailored to individual contracts.


It's also very dynamic this autumn: Europe's hotels report super occupancy figures by global standards, even overtaking the U.S.; at the same time, travellers are starting to save, say two market reports. In the Netherlands, the hotel market is moving only cautiously, but Amsterdam is pulling away - despite all the city's plans to curb tourism.


The EU has thrown a spanner in the works for Booking.com: The OTA giant has been prohibited from acquiring ETraveli, a mega-player in flight bookings. Booking.com gave us to understand that they want to continue despite the ban. Sarah Douag analyses the situation.


In Europe, the number of industrial robots is also growing steadily; it is already the second largest market after China. Numa Group is raising $59 million in fresh capital without disclosing exactly what it plans to use it for. And Jaeder Serviced Apartments and Timehouse are two more real estate- and capital-driven newbees getting in on the action and looking to merge hotel and apartment living.


Just in time for Expo Real the project news is increasing again, we add a few more personalia to this issue and new useful and colourful news on our Marketplace. There you will also find the hospitalityInside INVESTMENT BAROMETER: How do you see the future for investment? Cast your vote, preferable right here, online. What does your gut say?


Our marketplace next week is Expo Real! From Tuesday, the team will be on the road in Munich, and from Wednesday, the 27 exhibitors of the "World of Hospitality" are waiting for you for the agreed talks: All info and contacts can be found on our new Expo Real website!


We'll see each other in Munich. Without crisis mood. Panic is not the order of the day in the hotel industry, as our experts believe today.


P.S. If you haven't found your way to our new website yet, click here!



Yours, Maria Pütz-Willems

editor-in-chief


The New Website, Real Estate Talk and the Barometer
22.9.2023


Dear Insiders,

Our magazine is now also available on the new website for our subscribers. This link will take you to the news on this matter and to the new website. Surf away and let us know what you like and what you'd perhaps like us to add. Your subscription profile is stored on the website, it remains only for you to set a new password. 


My highlight of the last week was the 15th Hogan Lovells Hotel Day in Berlin. Marc Werner has once again gathered the crème de la crème of the German hotel real estate world here - by invitation only. However, some members of this "hotel family" were more than a little quiet this year. Among the 180 guests were only three bankers, but quite a few project developers. Consequently, the stage belonged to the operators, all of whom are hugely excited about their record-breaking RevPAR increases in individual markets, but are well aware of the profit crash. 


Reassuring: Interest rates are set to fall from here, and the devaluations of hotel properties are still bearable at around -20 percent. Disturbing: No one has an answer on how to make hotel real estate sustainable. Everyone just wants to tinker with the lease. Where is the creativity? Where the next Hotel Day will take place has not yet been determined. Marc, how about a desert island or united in a monastery hotel? With a guard at the door?


The EU sent such "gatekeepers" behind the gates four weeks ago to reflect: Six giant tech platforms, including Google, Meta and Microsoft, will now, as a result of new legislation (Digital Services Act) have to respect the rights of their customers and behave fairly in business. Get keyed up on this important topic with Macy Marvel and make sure the giants don't lay you in chains. 


Another key we give into your hands in this edition is our annual Investment BAROMETER which we launch today, 12 days before the Expo Real, for the 10th time together with our cooperation partner Union Investment. And, of course, the questions revolve around investments - currently more exciting than ever. Those who participate have the chance to win a book with questions and answers about sustainability that is as exciting as it is up-to-date. Everyone can participate! See Marketplace. 


On our - new, public - Expo Real page you will find everything about the fair: Portraits and direct links to our exhibitors at the World of Hospitality, mini-interviews in the context of BRICKS & BRAINS, and a news item on the hotel conference on the 1st Day of the Trade Fair: For the first time, the Expo Real is dedicating the entire "Hospitality Industry Dialogue" to one topic: Sustainability. A programme with many unknown as well as prominent names.


Our news in the magazine today is as colourful as it is real, starting with Alexa, who can now communicate even better thanks to her own chatbot, continuing with the hotel market in Poland, the reasons for which young people are dropping out of apprenticeships, and ending with the personalia and the weekly news from the hotel real estate market. 


And last but not least, there is Dirk Iserlohe of Honestis AG/Dorint Hotels, who, with a lawsuit over the Parkhotel Bremen, has managed to get the Federal Constitutional Court to finally address the unequal treatment of mid-sized, affiliated hotel companies in the pandemic. This is an important step for the entire industry. Dorint is not the only one missing the last payments from the government - amounts running into the millions. Dehoga and the Hotel Association have not said anything on this subject for a very long time. 


Surf a little over our new structure - and you will discover many new things. One partner who already feels at home with us and is even launching its second article today is F&B Heroes. They are dedicated to the "Amazing Places" in hotel gastronomy. Worth reading! 


And of course we also hope that you, dear readers and users, will also find HospitalityInside a fascinating marketplace where you can encounter many ideas and new names.


Maria Pütz-Willems,
editor-in-chief


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