Saturday, May 29, 2010

Coalition considers retracting tax break for hotels

The German government is considering retracting the much-criticised reduction in sales tax for hotel stays, which came into force on January 1. The measure is one of several aimed at shoring up Germany's ailing state finances.


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You Can Still Drink On Miami Beach This Weekend

Miami Beach hotels will be able to serve alcoholic drinks to beachgoers this Memorial Day weekend. The city is not cracking down on hoteliers who serve alcohol on the shores of the Atlantic this weekend, City Manager Jorge Gonzalez said Thursday. Earlier in the week, City Attorney Jose Smith told The Miami Herald that hotels cannot serve or sell alcohol on the public beach, based on a review of hotel concession agreements and the city's laws. Smith's review was prompted by complaints about public drinking and littering during spring break. In response, Beach commissioners told police they wanted a strict enforcement of the city's drinking laws, which ban alcohol consumption and sales in public places. Gonzalez said he is awaiting a formal legal opinion from Smith on the issue before tackling the question of beachside booze sold by hotels.

Proposed Bahamian Budget Bad For Hotels

THE BAHAMIAN hotel industry is facing a potential five-fold whammy, with the Government adding to increases in National Insurance Board (NIB) contribution rates, electricity costs and Out Island Promotion Board fees by increasing hotel room/guest taxes from 6 per cent to 10 per cent, along with an $5 increase in departure taxes.


The Bahamas Hotel Association's (BHA) vice-president, Frank Comito, said the increases were a cause for concern, as they countered efforts by tourism officials to make the Bahamas a more competitive and cost-effective destination.

Mr Comito said despite the increases, the BHA understood the Government's fiscal difficulties and the reason and need for the increases.

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The Hotel Minneapolis joins Marriott International Inc.’s Autograph Collection

A fast-growing hospitality-investment company has agreed to acquire a majority interest in The Hotel Minneapolis and will rebrand it under Marriott’s newest hotel flag.
The terms of Norwalk, Conn.-based HEI Hotels & Resorts’ acquisition were not known. The developer, Hempel Properties, and its hospitality partner, Morrissey Hospitality Cos. Inc., will retain minority interests in the 222-room hotel, located at 215 S. Fourth St. in downtown Minneapolis
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JAL To Sell Lodging Portfolio To Hotel Okura

MAY 28, 2010 -- Japan Airlines Corp. is finalizing negotiations to sell its hotel portfolio to Tokyo-based Hotel Okura Co., news sources reported today.


JAL, which currently is undergoing state-backed reorganization following its filing for the Japanese equivalent of bankruptcy protection earlier this year (BTNonline, Feb. 9), is selling its hotels as part of an attempt to regain profitability, according to Kyodo News International. JAL's managed hotel brands include the luxury Nikko Hotels International brand and the business-travel-focused Hotel JAL City brand.

JAL has managed hotels since it established its subsidiary JAL Hotels in 1970. Its current portfolio consists of 58 hotels, totaling more than 18,000 rooms, mostly in Japan and in JAL hub cities globally.

Hotel Okura has a portfolio of 23 member hotels, mostly in Japan but also in Korea, China, the Netherlands and Hawaii.

2 Pittsburgh-area Marriott hotels sold for $50.5M

Two Courtyard by Marriott hotels in the Pittsburgh area have been sold for a combined $50.5 million. They are the 182-room hotel at 945 Penn Ave., Downtown, and the 94-room hotel at The Waterfront complex in West Homestead.


Both will get upgrades costing $15,000 per room over the next year, said Philip A. Wade, vice president of investment for Inland American Lodging Advisor Inc., the new owner, based in Orlando, Fla.

The price for the Downtown hotel was $35 million. The Waterfront hotel cost $15.5 million. Moody National of Houston, Texas, was the seller in both cases; current management teams will stay.

Mortgage Holders Prevail in Auction of Former Maui Prince Hotel

The former Maui Prince Hotel in Hawaii was sold at a foreclosure auction Friday to its mortgage holders for $55 million.


Makena Beach & Golf ResortThe 310-room, renamed the Makena Beach & Golf Resort last year, became the target of foreclosure proceedings last summer when its previous owners missed payments on its $192.5 million mortgage. Friday’s auction puts the resort in the hands of those mortgage holders, represented by Wells Fargo Bank.

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