Banyan Tree Holdings hotel business 'continues to be adversely affected'

Published Tue, Jun 23, 2020 · 10:56 AM

RESORT group Banyan Tree Holdings said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday that its hotel business continues to be negatively impacted on the back of border controls and travel restrictions imposed as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Its hotel investment segment, which comprises owned hotels in Thailand and the Maldives, recorded "significantly lower" occupancies in April and May than in the corresponding months last year. 

For the five months ended May 31, 2020, occupancy stood at 36 per cent, down 39 percentage points; revenue per available room was S$106, falling 42 per cent from the same period last year. 

In the Maldives, occupancy was at 36 per cent, falling 31 percentage points; revenue per available room was S$215, down 42 per cent from last year. 

Against such a backdrop, overall occupancy for its hotels investment segment dropped to 34 per cent for the five months ended May 31, 2020, from 69 per cent last year. Revenue per available room fell from S$187 to S$108.

With the extension of Thailand's ban on international flights till the end of June and the lack of indication of the health and safety protocols that will be in place even as the authorities in Maldives say it has plans to reopen borders in July, the group expects operating performance for the first half of the year ending June 30, 2020 to be adversely affected.

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The group said that it expects to report a net loss in its half-year results; its unaudited financial results are expected to be announced around Aug 12, 2020. 

"Until there is clarity on the duration, severity and consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic, the group will continue to pursue steps to reduce costs, conserve cash and diversify our sources of funding to strengthen our balance sheet," it said in its business update. 

It added that it is reviewing all aspects of operations, including its sales and marketing programmes, to ensure that they can meet the demand once air travel returns to normal.

The group had also previously announced that the board has voluntarily committed to a 15 per cent reduction in the cash fee component of their directors' fees for the financial year ended Dec 31, 2019 as a show of solidarity. 

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