Key takeaways:
- U.S. occupancy improved after a post-Thanksgiving lull
- New York City hotels turned in their highest occupancy since the end of 2019
- Weekday group demand reached an all-time week 50 high
- The Caribbean is showing uptick in performance
- Most global markets still in depression are those in China
After a lull post-Thanksgiving, the U.S. hotel industry kicked back into gear as occupancy rose to 59.6% for the week of 4-10 December 2022. That level was up from 55.4% in the prior week. Room demand (23.1 million) was a record high for week 50 and for the two-week period following Thanksgiving. Occupancy was the fourth highest seen a fortnight after the holiday behind 2017, 2019 and 2018. Given the record-breaking demand, supply growth was the reason occupancy was lower than in 2017. As we have seen countless times this year, nominal average daily rate (ADR) and revenue per available room (RevPAR) were the highest ever seen for the specific week. Nominal ADR increased 2% week over week (WOW) to US$145, which was 12.4% higher than a year ago and 15.3% greater than in 2019. Nominal RevPAR was up 9.8% WoW to US$86, 16.7% above last year’s level and 13.9% better than in the year before the pandemic. Real ADR was US$0.26 less than in 2019 with real RevPAR down by a little more than US$1 against 2019.