NYC hotel owners just signed the most costly union deal the field has ever seen. It covers about 27,000 workers at more than 200 hotels.
The union behind the deal, the Hotel and Gaming Trades Council, called it their best renewal contract yet.
Owners say it lifts yearly costs by about 15%. The bet was that the World Cup would help cover it.
But June bookings say that bet is not paying off.
What's In The Deal
The deal was set last week. It stopped a strike right before the games.
Most workers get a pay bump of about 50% over the next eight years. Some housekeepers will earn six figures by 2032.
The field has not seen pay climb that fast. NYC rooms cost about $334 a night last year, per CoStar.
That is one of the top rates in the US outside resort towns. A Cornell hotel professor told the Wall Street Journal the math is plain.
When costs go up, rates go up.
The deal also locks in free health care for union staff. It adds new housing and child care funds paid by hotels.
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The World Cup Bet Isn't Paying Off
The NY/NJ area is hosting eight games. That count includes the final at MetLife Stadium.
Hotels were sure a busy June and July would soak up new costs. It has not shown up.
CoStar data show June bookings 12 points below last year as of mid-May. The reason? Ticket costs and crowd fears.
Foreign bookings have been soft too. Hotels point to the fight with Iran.
Some say demand is now picking up. That foreign flow is a big share of NYC hotel stays. Soft bookings from abroad hurt the city more than most US markets.
Top hotels should be fine. Their guests still spend a lot.
Mid-range and low-cost hotels look more at risk. Bank of America Institute data show lower-pay homes are cutting back on trips this year.
There is a bigger drag too. Hotels say flight cuts, higher plane fares, and US border checks could slow the foreign trips NYC counts on.
Worth Noting
Fuel is one of the top bills for airlines. Pay is the same for hotels.
It is the line that moves all the rest. When pay jumps 50% in eight years, rooms get more costly or owners eat the loss.
The split is the story. Top-end hotels keep pricing power. Mid-range hotels get squeezed.
For you, that split shows up in listed hotel REITs (firms that own hotels) and big NYC names. It also shows up in the rest of the travel chain that bends on a consumer pullback.
NYC just locked in higher rates for the next decade.
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