According to today's Times, things are getting really bad now: the luxury hotels are suffering. Since September ("almost in parallel with the stock market turmoil," says the article), demand for upscale hotel rooms has taken a nosedive:
Revenue per available room, the standard measure of performance, dropped 14 percent at upscale and luxury hotels in the week ending Oct. 18 over the comparable week last year, according to Smith Travel Research. For hotels in general, the decline was about 8 percent.
Yeah. Companies have been cutting back on travel expenses (well, some companies; not naming any names, AIG) and the luxury chains are feeling it. While it can be argued that price discounting may be detrimental to any luxury brand's prestige, the falling demand has put the companies that manage the luxury hotels at odds with the developers and owners of the properties -- and the latter group, according to the article, is pushing for aggressive discounting to help stop the bleeding.
So! While this is obviously crappy news, there is a little glimmer of goodness in this whole thing for us:
What does all of this mean for the traveler — or at least the business or leisure traveler who is still able to stay at a top-tier hotel? Better bargaining power, hotel insiders say.
Again, this is not necessarily bargaining power for the individual guest, but for your company -- you know, the one sending you on all those business trips -- so, in that sense, this is good. If things get bad enough that we think you may be taking a leisurely weekend at the Four Seasons with your boyfriend for $50 any time soon, we'll get back to you.
[Photo: David Walter Banks / NYTimes]
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