Third viral wave could spark Thai hotel fire sale

Posted By : Telegraf
16 Min Read

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BANGKOK – With Thailand suffering its third and worst wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, hopes for a swift revival of the tourism sector, accounting for as much as 20% of gross domestic product (GDP), have once again been dashed.

For Thailand’s huge inventory of hotels —there are about 50,000 hotels and guest houses nationwide — losses are mounting and an asset price-clearing moment of truth is inevitable, though the question in the industry is when.

To be sure, the kingdom’s hotel sector is no stranger to crisis. The industry was pummeled previously by the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, which led to a 50% devaluation of the Thai baht and a doubling of debt for hotels that had borrowed in dollars, and then the tsunami of 2004, which destroyed hundreds of hotels in Phuket, Krabi and Phang Nga and killed 8,000 people, mostly foreign tourists.

But today’s Covid-19 crisis, which has seen a surge of some 32,000 cases and 70 deaths in a month, is of a different ilk, say analysts.  

“This is a different ball game compared with 1997,” said Chanin Donavanik, chief executive at Dusit International, a prominent Thai hotel chain. “The suffering is more widespread and in 1997, at least for the tourism industry, the impact was just for a few months before tourists started flocking into Thailand because of the cheap baht. This time I think the recovery will take 3-5 years,” he predicted.

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