Challenges and More in 2004
October 30, 2003
James M. "Jim" Norman- Ft Lauderdale
Hospitality is and remains a unique part of the real estate
industry. Year after year, the challenges facing those involved in it—owners,
operators, franchisors, franchisees, lenders, investors and vendors—appear,
evolve and reappear in new and more complex versions of old issues reborn and
new issues, both foreseen and unforeseen. This Alert identifies and describes
some of the issues and concerns that can be expected to capture the attention of
the hospitality industry and demand new solutions in the year ahead. Some of
the challenges will impact multiple disciplines within the industry. No group
in, or wanting to deal with, the hospitality industry can afford to sit back and
hope all will work out, somehow.
Help, I Just Gave Away My Rooms.
This year’s hero will be the company or person who figures
out how to reclaim supply and pricing discipline without losing the considerable
marketing reach of the Internet. The Internet is here and it is not going
away. Baby boomers, “Gen Xers” and behind them, the “Gen Yers” love the power
of the Internet and must be expected to use it more, not less. Better
distribution systems and greater management of those systems will be a priority
for owners and for the brands. The challenge will only become more intense as
new affinity and frequency programs are unveiled. Companies like American
Express and Internet competitors like Expedia and Hotels.com will soon have
their own frequent user programs designed to compete with similar programs
already in place with every national brand. Owners, and brands in particular,
will need to develop a better strategy and a better communications system both
within each company and among companies (without running afoul of antitrust
laws) to balance maintaining brand standards with maintaining occupancy.
Failure of the industry to respond here may result in Internet companies
becoming “brands.” If this happens, will independent hotels replace national
brands? Certainly not in the immediate future, but a long-term trend could
emerge.
Cash Is Still King.
Money is power. But it impacts the industry in many ways.
There is the obvious impact of owners needing to satisfy all of the needs and
demands of the capital providers, whether that capital is equity or debt (and
the many shades of each or a combination of the two). But there is also the
impact of more subtle factors such as the sponsorship behind ownership,
particularly if development or repositioning is involved, and the underwriting
of the brand. Certainly there are certain assets in key markets that have
developed their own “brand” awareness, and can withstand underwriting without a
brand. This class of assets can usually be relied upon to perform well with or
without brand support. There is a much larger pool of assets that simply must
be branded in order to satisfy the Wall Street type lenders. The recent growth
of mezzanine loan programs of all stripes will not alter this very much. 2004
is not expected to be a year of significant RevPar growth (although some growth
is expected), so there will continue to be the requirement that owners show
solid cash flow consistently able to cover debt service, but achieving RevPar
growth will be difficult when wholesalers control blocks of your rooms.
Is This Place Safe?
For the most past, compliance with the USA Patriot Act is
honored in the breach, and security at hotels within the continental United
States is less rigorous than a Target or K-Mart trying to prevent theft. To be
sure, there are certain cities or certain assets that present a higher target
profile, and have done considerably more to not only appear to be more secure,
but in some cases, actually be more secure. This is an area with a serious
disconnect between the Office of the General Counsel, that spends its time
worrying about compliance with laws and regulations, like the USA Patriot Act,
but never even sees a guest, and the front line staff that is already
preoccupied with processing check-ins and check-outs, welcoming guests, and
putting out all of the daily fires that come with actually having to deal with
and satisfy real people who come to the hotel. Many brands and companies have
not spent the time and money to understand the many new rules and regulations
that came on line after 9/11, and even if they have at the corporate level, they
have not gotten the word down to the line employees that should be executing
corporate policy. The international catastrophes in Bali, Jakarta or in the
Middle East have not been widely discussed domestically and seem to have had
little or no adverse impact on U.S. based hoteliers. We remain only one
incident away from driving the industry back down into the depths of despair,
but we seem quite willing to ignore it, as if that might make the whole mess go
away. There are engineering and construction methods to prevent loss of life.
They are expensive to the point where 20% would be added to new construction.
Competitive pressures and the economic health of the industry make that an
impossible standard. Perhaps the more important question is whether the
traveling public would like to check into a resort that resembled NORAD
headquarters.
The Supply Dilemma.
An oft-repeated quote on this subject is that, “We are not
overbuilt; we are under-demolished.” Much of the stock of the industry looks
old and tired in many areas. Yes, there are fewer capital projects. Yes, there
are hotels that drop out of brands, or drop through brand after brand until they
finally land somewhere or with no brand. But they do not seem to go away. It
is not being suggested that the hospitality industry can do anything about this
segment of lower end product, other than to find new technologies and designs to
dry up the demand for the older products. The market will take care of the
rest. In the limited service sector we expect to see new products brought on
line that will allow a smaller number of people to manage a larger number of
rooms. The same Internet-savvy customers, who will find the best rate on the
Internet without ever accessing the brand’s own Web site, will probably not be
offended by checking themselves in at a computer terminal—or won’t be when the
technology allows this to work as well as airline kiosk check-in. It’s not here
yet. These same customers will also demand high speed Internet via broadband,
not dial-up for free. The days of not offering high speed Internet access or
charging for it are just about over, if not over already in a market sense.
What Are the Lawyers Up To?
The hospitality industry is no stranger to the courthouse,
and that is not likely to change in 2004. Owners and operators will continue to
disagree about their respective rights, obligations and operating practices in
management agreements, and franchisors and franchisees will carry on their
running disagreements about a range of issues, from territorial exclusivity to
favoring company operated properties over franchisee operated properties.
We expect to see an appellate court opinion in the Woodley
Road case in 2004. That opinion will either motivate more claims based on an
alleged breach of fiduciary obligations and federal and state anti-trust laws,
or may make similar cases more difficult. Most lawyers believe that the
malpractice verdict against the law firm that represented Sheraton in that case
will not change industry practices in anything like the way that the Woodley
Road verdict did. Industry buzz hints at management agreement structural
changes that will make them more like franchise agreements than agency
agreements. Others suggest that we will see operating leases, modeled after the
custom in many countries outside the U.S. There are enough legal, tax and
business pitfalls with all of these alternate arrangements that wholesale change
is unlikely. What is likely is that a few companies will try a new approach in
2004, probably in selected cases. That, in turn, will have to be litigated
before the industry can feel comfortable with any structure.
The key litigation issue will be the resolution of the
extent of the fiduciary relationship between owners and operators. From that
will flow critical changes in operator disclosure and owner consent requirements
with respect to fees, commissions and the sharing of rebates and similar monies.
Employment discrimination claims, with an increasing number
based on “English only” requirements and alleged discrimination against Muslim
and Arab employees in the aftermath of September 11, will continue, along with
sexual harassment and hostile workplace cases. Such is the nature of an
industry with more employees per square foot than probably any other.
There’s More To Come.
There are even more challenges ahead. Some have not been
hinted at yet, but they will arrive during 2004. Every hospitality player has a
list of its own that is property, company and industry-niche specific. The
message for 2004 is that much more time must be devoted to fully vetting these
issues and developing strategies to address them, at every level. The economy
is recovering—or is it? What are the geographies and product types that will
flourish? Which will not fare so well? How will Wall Street look at the
industry as a place for its money? There are no easy answers to these issues,
there never are. There is an opportunity to develop new paradigms through which
to engage the issues and emerge from the pack through creative solutions. These
solutions must first be filtered through the lens of current legal restraints.
Each issue that we will confront this year must be viewed in the context of
current legal precedent, established through the courts; current legal and
regulatory constraints, as established by federal, state and local legislative
bodies; and current industry thinking as seen through the eyes of those who have
spent years watching our industry develop and mature. Opportunities should not
be missed, nor challenges ignored in the hope they will disappear somehow. Are
you ready?
For more information, e-mail Jim Norman at jim.norman@hklaw.com or call
toll free, 1-888-688-8500.