SHANGHAI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--With recent hotel openings in Ningbo, Sanya, Yangzhou and Xian, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. (NYSE: HOT) today announced it has surpassed the opening of its 100th operating hotel in China with plans to open 15 additional hotels by the end of this year. With eight hotels already opened in the first quarter of 2012, Starwood will open a total of 23 hotels in China in 2012, which is on pace with 2011 openings making 2012 the second consecutive year the company has opened a record number of hotels here in any one year.
“In addition to the record-breaking pace at which we are opening hotels in China, we’ve signed 12 new deals in the first three months of 2012 and Greater China accounts for 44 percent of our global pipeline driven by an ever-increasing Chinese domestic travel market, as well as the fast-growing international inbound market,” said Frits van Paasschen, President & CEO of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. “Additionally, China continues to be the richest source of new Starwood guests with more than 600,000 active Starwood Preferred Guest members which is up 62 percent from last year.”
Since Starwood’s landmark debut of The Great Wall Sheraton Hotel in Beijing in 1985, China has now become Starwood’s second largest market in the world after the United States and Starwood continues to lead as the largest high-end hotel operator in the country. Looking ahead, Starwood’s growth in China is being fueled by the power of its Sheraton and Westin brands and, increasingly, the momentum of the company’s mid-market brands – Aloft and Four Points by Sheraton which now boasts the company’s second largest pipeline in China behind Sheraton.
Sheraton and Westin Continue to Fuel Growth in China, Including
Starwood’s Largest Hotel – Sheraton Macao Hotel, Cotai Central
Sheraton
is slated to open nine new hotels across China in 2012, reaching a total
of nearly 80 hotels there by 2015. More than one-third of Starwood’s new
hotels in China will fly the Sheraton flag, building on the brand’s
30-year legacy in the country. In mid-September, the iconic Sheraton
brand will also celebrate the opening of the first phase of the
3,863-room Sheraton Macao Hotel, Cotai Central which will be the largest
Sheraton, as well as the largest Starwood hotel, in the world. Offering
three restaurants with poolside cafes, 20,000 sq m of meeting space and
two outdoor swimming pools, Sheraton Macao is a highly anticipated
addition to Cotai Strip, also known as the “Las Vegas of Asia.”
Westin will open four new hotels in China in 2012, resulting in a portfolio of 18 properties in this key market by year’s end, extending the brand’s reach in second and third tier cities. The new Westin hotels will open in fast-growing cities across China, including Ningbo, Xiamen, Changbaishan and Taiyuan.
“About 70 percent of our hotel openings in Asia this year are in China,” said Simon Turner, President of Global Development for Starwood. “The incredible growth of our portfolio owes itself to the strength of our brands, our strong teams, and the confidence from our investors and owners in delivering world-class hotels and personalized services to our guests.”
Starwood Continues to Grow Luxury Brands in China
After
a successful year in 2011 opening St. Regis hotels in Tianjin, Sanya,
and Shenzhen, Starwood’s Luxury Collection brand will open two hotels
this year – Twelve at Hengshan in Shanghai and The Royal Begonia on
Hainan Island, China’s first Luxury Collection resort. The Luxury
Collection launched in China in 2010, with a suitably iconic property –
The Astor Hotel – in Tianjin.
Starwood Rolls Out Global Starwood Personalized Travel to 1,100
Hotels Around the World
Following the successful pilot in
key gateway cities across the globe, Starwood rolled out Starwood
Personalized Travel to its nearly 1,100 hotels worldwide. Chinese guests
are now able to experience personalized home-away-from-home touches,
including in-room tea kettles, slippers, translated welcome materials
and on-site translation services, as well as familiar Chinese favorites
like congee.
“With 100 million outbound travelers by 2015, China will become a major global travel force, and in fact, the largest travel market in the world,” said Miguel Ko, Chairman and President, Starwood’s Asia Pacific Division. “When they travel abroad, the Chinese will stay with the hotel brands they know from home, which underscores the significance of our growing footprint of flagship hotels in China and its halo effect on Starwood’s hotels around the world. Now with the global roll out of Starwood Personalized Travel, we have once again taken the global hospitality standard to the next level – delivering personalized services to our Chinese guests anywhere in the world.”
About Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.
Starwood
Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. is one of the leading hotel and leisure
companies in the world with 1090 properties in 100 countries and
territories with 154,000 employees at its owned and managed properties.
Starwood Hotels is a fully integrated owner, operator and franchisor of
hotels, resorts and residences with the following internationally
renowned brands: St. Regis®, The Luxury Collection®, W®, Westin®, Le
Méridien®, Sheraton®, Four Points® by Sheraton, Aloft®, and Element
SM. The company boasts one of the industry’s leading loyalty
programs, Starwood Preferred Guest (SPG), allowing members to earn and
redeem points for room stays, room upgrades and flights, with no
blackout dates. Starwood Hotels also owns Starwood Vacation Ownership,
Inc., a premier provider of world-class vacation experiences through
villa-style resorts and privileged access to Starwood brands. For more
information, please visit www.starwoodhotels.com.
(Note: This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities regulations. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance or events and involve risks and uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results or events to differ materially from those anticipated at the time the forward-looking statements are made. These risks and uncertainties are presented in detail in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Although we believe the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are based upon reasonable assumptions, we can give no assurance that our expectations will be attained or that results and events will not materially differ. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.)