Marriott CEO: ‘Our occupancy was through the roof’ through the 4th of July weekend

In This Article:

Tony Capuano, CEO of Marriott International, Inc, joins Yahoo Finance’s Brian Sozzi to discuss the recovery in leisure travel and outlook on the company post-pandemic.

Video Transcript

ALEXIS CHRISTOFOROUS: Toss things over now to my colleague, Brian Sozzi, who is live in Times Square. And he's got a very special guest, the CEO of Marriott International, Tony Capuano, talking a little rebound in the travel sector. Hi, Brian.

BRIAN SOZZI: Hey, Alexis. Thanks so much. Yeah, joining me is Marriott CEO Tony Capuano. Tony, it's good to see you in person.

TONY CAPUANO: I'll say. It's been too long.

BRIAN SOZZI: It has been--

TONY CAPUANO: Thanks for having me.

BRIAN SOZZI: Yeah, I know. It's just good to be back out and in a hotel like this. This is a luxury boutique hotel in the middle of New York City. I mean, what are some of the booking trends right now in a hotel like?

TONY CAPUANO: Strong and growing. As you might expect, as we're seeing across the US, the demand is disproportionately driven by leisure. But as we talked about earlier, the fall will be telling. We read with great interest some of the big banks here in New York, talking pretty aggressively about bringing folks back to the office. And our hope and expectation is that will act as a catalyst for a strong recovery in business travel as well.

BRIAN SOZZI: What is recovering first, leisure or business travel?

TONY CAPUANO: In most areas of the world, leisure. Certainly in the US, that has been the case.

BRIAN SOZZI: It is amazing to me-- we had Delta's earnings out this morning. And they're talking about leisure travel back to 2019 pre-COVID levels. Are you back there yet?

TONY CAPUANO: We're above in many, many markets. If you-- we just went through the 4th of July weekend. Our occupancy was through the roof. And maybe the most encouraging thing for us is we saw real pricing power. So if you look at our performance through the July 4th weekend, our room rates, our achieved room rates were 10% ahead of where we were in 2019. And maybe more interestingly, if you just look at the subset of our luxury portfolio, we were almost 35% ahead in rate performance from where we were pre-pandemic.

BRIAN SOZZI: So you say you have pricing power.

TONY CAPUANO: We do, certainly in leisure.

BRIAN SOZZI: What-- you know, this is a luxury hotel. So we're in the middle of Times Square right now. 400-- what, 452 rooms, 20 suites, one penthouse. Now there's another location around here, Madison Square Park. I mean, are these hotels packed out? What are you seeing in the metro markets?