Twin Cities hotels are being hit with an unprecedented drop in business due to the COVID-19 outbreak, with industry experts predicting that hotels could begin to close their doors, some for good.
"Now we are looking at occupancies within the 10% range. It just completely stops," said Ben Graves, chief executive of Graves Hospitality, which has managed and developed hotels across the country including the new Moxy hotel in downtown Minneapolis and the Intercontinental Hotel at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. "Nobody ever dreamed that this could be possible."
Graves Hospitality has furloughed about 850 employees across the country, or a little more than 60% of its staff, to cut costs and allow employees to apply for unemployment benefits after occupancy numbers "started dropping like a lead balloon" due to travelers canceling their plans and large events being postponed, Graves said.
Graves, who has worked in the business since the 1990s, said the significant and likely prolonged effects of COVID-19 are hard to compare with other modern travel downturns like the SARS outbreak of 2003, the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the Great Recession.
"Nothing like this," Graves said in an interview. "This is completely unprecedented."
March is supposed to be the start of the shoulder season, the booking season between peak and low season, for Twin Cities hotels, when occupancy typically starts to climb to 70% or 80%, Graves said.
Hotels have high labor costs and large mortgages, which can make it difficult for owners to deal with extended periods of low occupancy like what may happen because of the coronavirus, he said.
Some hotels in the Minneapolis region are going to have to temporarily close their doors, Graves predicted.