DENVER—HREC Investment Advisors has just completed a study of hotel supply and demand trends in the Orlando Market over the current economic cycle.
Major findings of the study are as follows:
- Visitation Growth (Current Cycle): From 2010 (when the current cycle began) through 2017, visitations to Orlando have grown from 50 million to 72 million, an average growth rate of 6.3% per year.
- Hotel Supply Growth (Current Cycle): Over the same seven-year period, supply growth has averaged less than 1% per year. Over the past five years (from mid-year 2013 to mid-year 2018)—i.e., during that time in the cycle that hotel development started accelerating—supply growth in the Orlando Market averaged just 1.2% per year.
- Visitation Growth (2018): Although mid-year visitation counts are not regularly published for the Orlando Market, they are for the State of Florida. Given that Orlando is the largest market in the state (typically it accounts for at least 60% of the overall Florida market), mid-year estimates for the state are a good indicator of Orlando-specific trends. To this point, Visit Florida has estimated that visitations to Florida grew by 5.9% for the first six months of 2018. By extension, it is safe to assume that visitation growth for Orlando in 2018 will continue to grow at a rate of 5-6%, which will result in the eight consecutive years of record visitations.
- Hotel Supply Growth (2018): Based on a count of those hotels that have already opened or are scheduled to open by year-end, Orlando hotel supply growth for 2018 is forecasted at 2,739 guestrooms, a growth rate of 2.2%. To put this in national perspective, CBRE Hotels’ Americas Research projections for CY 2018 for the top 60 metropolitan areas in the U.S. showed that the Orlando market ranks 47th in terms of percentage growth.
- Visitation Growth (2019): It is highly likely that the current-cycle growth trend in visitations will continue through 2019. This view is based on national economic growth and new attractions, including Disney’s Star Wars” Galaxy’s Edge, which is scheduled to open in the fall of 2019.
- Hotel Supply Growth (2019): At this time of year (early November), one can predict the growth in supply for the following year with some precision: If a hotel is not under construction at this point, it is not likely going to open next year. Based on this assumption, HREC personnel physically toured each of the proposed hotel project sites in the market and, as such, have concluded that in 2019 hotel supply will grow by some 2,711 rooms (+/-2.1%).
Paul Sexton, head of HREC’s Orlando office, said, “Despite the addition of certain high-profile hotel projects that have opened in the recent past or are currently under construction, the Orlando hotel market has maintained an astonishing balance between supply and demand throughout the current cycle.”
Added Sexton: “Based on the seemingly never-ending addition of flagship attractions at both Disney and Universal, the ever expanding and improving Orange County Convention Center and local officials’ commitment to expanding the travel bandwidth vis-à-vis major airport and roadway expansion projects, demand should continue to grow at rates that exceed those for the national economy.
“The growth in supply should continue at a very manageable rate throughout the remainder of the current economic cycle based on a shrinking pool of A-rated greenfield development sites, rising rates on construction loans, the rising cost of construction/availability of labor, and the availability of ‘bankable’ brands available to developers,” he continued.
Scott Stephens, COO of HREC Investment Advisors, said, “It is easy to overestimate the impact of new supply in the Orlando market when one sees regular announcements for newly opened hotels of 500, 750 and 1,000 rooms. It pays to keep in mind that Orlando is the largest lodging market in the world—it is actually larger than Las Vegas when one takes into consideration ‘other’ lodging units such as timeshare and for-rent vacation homes—and can absorb a significant number of new hotel rooms each year.”