Business

French hotel giant Accor plunges into red on virus hit

Hotel giant says sales down some 60% at €1.6 billion, leading to net loss of just under €2 billion

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 24 Feb 2021 9:00PM

French hotel giant Accor plunges into red on virus hit
Accor, which runs hotel chains such as Ibis, Sofitel, Novotel, Mercure and Pullman, says revenue per room collapsed by 62% for full year 2020 and was down more than 88% in the second quarter at the height of the first wave. – Twitter pic, February 24, 2021 

PARIS – French hotel giant Accor said today it plunged into the red last year as the coronavirus pandemic devastated the hotel and hospitality business worldwide.

Ranked number six globally, Accor reported sales down some 60% at €1.6 billion (RM7.88 billion), producing a net loss of just under €2 billion.

Analysts surveyed by Factset and Bloomberg had expected revenues of €1.85 billion and a net loss of €1.26 billion.

The company, which runs chains such as Ibis, Sofitel, Novotel, Mercure and Pullman, has seen its business devastated by the pandemic which has brought international travel and the hospitality and tourism sectors to a virtual halt.

Revenue per room collapsed by 62% for full year 2020 and was down more than 88% in the second quarter at the height of the first wave.

“This unprecedented fall reflects the global deterioration in the business environment caused by lockdowns and the closing of international borders in an effort to curb the pandemic,” Accor said in a statement.

Accor noted that after the pandemic battered results in the second quarter of the year, there was a noticeable pick-up in the third quarter in all regions as economies re-opened over the summer holidays.

This recovery however then came to a halt as governments re-introduced restrictions to cope with a fresh upsurge of coronavirus cases.

Accor said it hoped for better times this year as vaccination programmes allow an easing of restrictions, although “caution unfortunately remains the watchword” given uncertainties about how the pandemic will develop. – AFP, February 24, 2021

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