Hotel News Resource

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Hilton to Move Headquarters to D.C. Area

Hilton Hotels, one of the world's largest lodging firms, said yesterday that it is moving its corporate headquarters -- and several hundred jobs -- to the D.C. region this year, parking itself squarely in the back yard of a major competitor, Marriott International.

The announcement, which surprised industry executives, comes less than two years after the Blackstone Group bought the Beverly Hills, Calif., hotel chain for $26 billion and later named Christopher Nassetta chief executive. Nassetta, who grew up in Arlington County, had been chief executive of Host Hotels & Resorts, based in Bethesda.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Hyatt Corp in JV with Emaar MGF to build hotels in India

NEW DELHI: US-based hotel chain operator Global Hyatt Corporation announced a 24:76 joint venture with property developer Emaar MGF for building six hotels in India by 2013. The two partners will jointly invest about Rs 1,000 crore(~$200 million) to build these hotels under the mid-market brand Hyatt Place.

Besides picking a minority stake in a JV with Emaar MGF, Global Hyatt has signed management contracts with different individual property developers for another 14 hotels under its premium brands-Park Hyatt, Grand Hyatt and Hyatt Regency. Under the management contract, the real estate developer sets up the hotel and the hotel operator charges a management fee from the real estate developer to manage the hotel.

Global Hyatt Corporation global head-real estate & developments Steve Haggaerty said, "We will spend about $ 200 million on six hotels jointly with Emaar MGF. This investment would be a mix of equity and debt and we are in the process of raising the debt component."

Saturday, January 10, 2009

MGM Mirage’s Murren Cutting Debt, May Sell Casinos

Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- MGM Mirage’s new chief executive officer, James Murren, said he plans to “dramatically” reduce debt and will consider further casino sales as he overhauls the company’s balance sheet.

Murren plans to refinance maturing bonds as bank lending resumes and markets open up. MGM Mirage may buy back some notes trading at discounted levels, either through market purchases or tender offers, he said in an interview yesterday. Nothing is off the table, said Murren, 47, who also was named chairman.

“We’re going to pull every lever we feel like we should pull to strengthen this company, to not only weather the recession, but come out of it stronger,” Murren said. “We are certainly not looking to aggressively sell assets, but the point is that we do have assets that are attractive and we are going to be very responsive.”