Marriott International - Q2 2023
August 1, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Everyone, welcome to today's Marriott International Q2 2023 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, you will have the opportunity to ask questions during the question and answer period. You may register to ask a question at any time by pressing star one on your touch-tone phone. Please note, this call may be recorded. I will be standing by should you need any assistance. It is now my pleasure to turn today's call over to Jackie McConagha, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Jackie McConagha (SVP of Investor Relations)
Thank you. Hello, welcome to Marriott's second quarter 2023 earnings call. On the call with me today are Tony Capuano, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Leeny Oberg, our Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President, Development, and Betsy Dahm, our Vice President of Investor Relations. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that many of our comments today are not historical facts and are considered forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, as described in our SEC filings, which could cause future results to differ materially from those expressed in or implied by our comments. Please also note that, unless otherwise stated, our RevPAR occupancy and average daily rate comments reflect system-wide constant currency results for comparable hotels.
Statements in our comments and the press release we issued earlier today are effective only today and will not be updated as actual events unfold. You can find our earnings release and reconciliations of all non-GAAP financial measures referred to in our remarks today on our investor relations website. Now I will turn the call over to Tony.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Thanks, Jackie, and thank you all for joining us today. Our terrific second quarter results demonstrate the strength of global lodging demand and the success of our growth strategies. I've experienced the robust demand for lodging firsthand, as I've been on the road a lot this year and have had the privilege of visiting every one of our regions. It has been wonderful to spend time with our team of hardworking and dedicated associates at properties around the world, and to see how quickly global travel has rebounded. Second quarter worldwide RevPAR rose 13.5% versus the 2022 quarter, led by another quarter of meaningful recovery in Greater China. Less than two quarters after travel restrictions were lifted, RevPAR in Greater China has now surpassed 2019 levels, primarily due to the surge in domestic demand.
Worldwide occupancy in the quarter reached 72%, 5 percentage points higher than the year-ago quarter. With our unwavering focus on maximizing revenues, global ADR grew 6% year-over-year. Global leisure demand and ADR remain robust. Second quarter leisure transient room nights and ADR each increased 5% year-over-year, yielding 10% revenue growth. In the U.S. and Canada, leisure revenues rose 1% above last year's sensational second quarter. Demand in this market has been stabilizing on a year-over-year basis, with travelers from the region increasingly taking vacations overseas now that pandemic-related travel restrictions are behind us. Leisure room nights from the U.S. and Canadian travelers jumped 90% in Asia Pacific and over 20% in Europe compared to the same period last year.
The group segment had another great quarter, with revenues in the U.S. and Canada growing 10% year-over-year, driven by both rate and occupancy. Group revenues are expected to remain strong going forward. At the end of June, group revenue for the back half of 2023 was pacing up 11% to last year. Meeting planners are beginning to book further out, a trend we're also seeing with transient customers. Group revenue for full year 2024 was pacing up 14% year-over-year at the end of the quarter, an improvement from up 9% just three months prior. Recovery in business transient demand remains slow but steady, with demand from our top corporate accounts progressing modestly in the quarter. In the U.S. and Canada, ADR again rose nicely compared to 2022, thanks to high single-digit special corporate rate increases.
This led to business transient revenues rising 12% year-over-year. Overall, cross-border travel demand also rose again in the quarter, primarily driven by an increase in international visitors to the Asia Pacific region. The percent of total room nights from cross-border guests is now roughly one percentage point below 2019 levels of approximately 20%. Prior to the pandemic, international visitors accounted for nearly one quarter of room nights in Greater China. With the region's international airlifts still only around 40% of 2019 capacity at the end of the second quarter, we believe there is still meaningful growth opportunity in and from Greater China. We remain keenly focused on strengthening our powerful Marriott Bonvoy loyalty program, which has over 186 million members. To further build engagement, we continue to enrich the platform with an enhanced booking experience.
more choices for customers, and complementary products that drive more value and capture share of wallet, such as our co-branded credit cards and travel insurance. Our international credit cards had a record quarter, driving global card acquisitions up 25% and global card spend up 10% versus the year ago quarter. We are increasingly leveraging technology to enhance the guest experience, to drive profitability for our owners, and to simplify processes for our associates. As we've mentioned previously, we are in the process of a major global transformation of our digital and core technology. We will be launching new reservations, loyalty, and property management platforms over the next several years, and look forward to the numerous capabilities these new systems will offer our key constituents.
As we focus on paths for growth, we are adding new offerings and experiences in segments where we believe there is strong consumer interest beyond our current brands. A great example is our recent announcement of an exclusive 20-year strategic license agreement with MGM Resorts International, and the creation of MGM Collection with Marriott Bonvoy. The collection, which will launch beginning in October, encompasses 17 resorts with 40,000 rooms. This deal will provide us with significant presence in Las Vegas, one of the most popular destinations in the country, with fantastic properties like Bellagio, the MGM Grand, and Aria, as well as additional distribution in five other key U.S. cities. Beyond just hotels, our strategic agreement with MGM will also give our members access to more sports, music, culinary, and entertainment experiences. We also recently announced our planned new affordable mid-scale extended stay offering in the U.S. and Canada.
Our deep experience and leading position in extended stay lodging, coupled with the recent trends toward increased work flexibility and longer stay travel, make us very optimistic about our growth potential. While it is still early days, initial interest from the development community has been extraordinary. We are working on several hundred deals and hope to have our first deal signed by the end of this year. In the Caribbean and Latin America, we're very excited about the recent addition of City Express to our brand lineup. These mid-scale properties have started to join our distribution channels, and we are thrilled with the noticeable uplift in conversion rates, ADR, and bookings so far. Our development team remains focused on driving conversions, especially multi-unit opportunities, and interest from owners remains robust. In the first half of this year, conversions accounted for 21% of our organic rooms additions.
Including MGM, conversions represented 63% of our organic signings through June. The MGM rooms entering our system beginning this fall, will boost our rooms distribution in 2023 by 2.4%. With more than half the year behind us, we have refined our full year net rooms growth expectations to 6.4%-6.7%. Driving valuable global growth is a top company priority, we are very pleased with the strong rate at which we expect our industry-leading system to grow this year. We look forward to sharing more about many key aspects of our business, including our broad global portfolio of over 30 brands, their exciting growth prospects all over the world, Marriott Bonvoy, the brand that brings it all together, our technology transformation, and our multiyear financial model at our Investor Day on September 27th.
Now, I'll hand the call over to Leeny, to discuss our second quarter financial results in more detail, as well as our updated outlook for 2023. Leeny?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Thank you, Tony. Our strong second quarter results reflected solid demand and ADR growth around the world. With Greater China RevPAR more than doubling, international RevPAR rose an impressive 39% over the 2022 second quarter. Occupancy for our international regions reached 68%, a 12 percentage point improvement versus the prior year quarter, and ADR increased 14%. RevPAR in the U.S. and Canada grew 6% versus the year-ago quarter. Occupancy reached 74%, up 1 percentage point, while ADR increased 4%. While demand from both business and leisure desks remains strong, growth rates are stabilizing as we return to more normalized year-over-year comparisons. Total company gross fee revenues totaled $1.25 billion, rising 16%, led by meaningful growth in incentive management fees, or IMFs.
IMFs totaled $193 million in the quarter, with fees in Greater China up significantly, given the strong recovery in that region. Impressively, our IMFs in the first half of 2023 were 19% higher than peak IMFs in the first half of 2018. Our owned lease and other revenue, net of direct expenses, grew 24%. despite lower termination fees, largely due to improved performance at our owned and leased hotels. Our strong IMFs and owned lease performance demonstrate our operating team's terrific work at driving profitability. Corporate G&A rose just 4%, well above the rate of top line growth. With the strong operating leverage inherent in our business, adjusted EBITDA reached a record $1.2 billion, up an impressive 20% year-over-year. On the development front, we're closely monitoring the financing environment, which remains tight around the world.
While the U.S. and Europe are facing the most lending challenges, even in these markets, financing has not come to a standstill. Over the past few months, many owners in these regions have been able to secure financing and begin construction. In most of our other regions, there's much less dependence on debt financing for new deals. Hotel construction generally continues apace. Properties in our industry-leading 547,000 room pipeline that are already under construction continue to move forward. We've not seen the number of deals leaving the pipeline increase. Global fallout in the quarter was 1.3%, below our historic quarterly average of just over 2%. Let's talk about our 2023 outlook, the full details of which are in our earnings release.
With the better-than-expected second quarter results and robust global booking trends, especially internationally, we're raising our full year guidance. While there is still a level of macroeconomic uncertainty, as we look into the third quarter, the consumer is generally holding up well, and our forward bookings remain solid. In the U.S., it now seems more likely that the U.S. economy could have a soft landing. Our updated guidance range assumes relatively steady global economic conditions throughout the remainder of 2023, with continued resilience of travel demand. Growth is expected to remain higher internationally than in the U.S. and Canada, where we're seeing a return to more normal seasonal patterns and year-over-year RevPAR growth is stabilizing. For the full year, we now expect 7%-9% RevPAR growth in the U.S. and Canada.
We're raising our expectation for international RevPAR growth to 28%-30%, leading to an expected 12%-14% increase in global RevPAR. Total fees for the full year could rise between 16% and 18%, with the non-RevPAR-related component increasing 4%-7%. Non-RevPAR-related fees are expected to benefit from higher credit card fees, resulting from growth in average spend and in the number of cardholders. We still expect 2023 G&A expenses of $915 million-$935 million, an annual increase of 3%-5%, but still below 2019 levels. Compared to 2022, full year adjusted EBITDA could increase between 18% and 21%, and adjusted EPS could rise 25%-29%. Our powerful asset-light business model continues to generate a large amount of cash.
In the first half of this year, our net cash provided by operating activities surpassed $1.5 billion, nearly 50% higher than the same period last year. We've returned $2.3 billion to shareholders through June. With the increase in our adjusted EBITDA forecast, we now expect to return between $4.1 billion and $4.5 billion to shareholders in 2023. This assumes full-year investment spending of $900 million-$1 billion, which includes the $100 million spent on the acquisition of the City Express brand portfolio. With our major technology transformation, we will also have elevated technology spending this year and over the next few years, though this investment is overwhelmingly expected to be reimbursed over time. Our capital allocation philosophy has not changed.
We're committed to our investment-grade rating, investing in growth that is accretive to shareholder value, while returning excess capital to shareholders through a combination of a modest cash dividend and share repurchases. Thank you for your interest in Marriott. Tony and I are now happy to answer your questions.
Operator (participant)
At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your touchtone phone. You may withdraw your question at any time by pressing star two. Again, that is star and one. We will take our first question from Stephen Grambling with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Stephen Grambling (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, thanks for taking the questions. Maybe to start off, just on the non-RevPAR-related fees, you gave some color on that in the quarter, but I guess, what are your expectations for the remainder of the year? Can you just remind us on how those contracts were, were structured in terms of length of term? Is there an opportunity to, to renegotiate those coming up?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Yeah, no, we've got several years left on them, Stephen, and are really pleased with the continued growth in the credit card fees, and frankly, really particularly pleased with adding so many new countries. I think when you look at credit card fees for the year, I think broadly speaking, a double-digit growth rate is right. Now, for total non-RevPAR fees, we've talked about a 4%-7% growth in non-RevPAR fees. Because of the lumpiness of things like residential fees and the reality, as you remember, our timeshare fees are overwhelmingly a flat payment that go up only slightly. Overall, I think we're looking at 4%-7%. Again, on the credit card side, we continue to see really strong growth.
Stephen Grambling (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Then as a, as a follow-up that's unrelated, just on the technology investment, obviously, a lot of talk about AI recently across all industries. How are you generally thinking about the tech investment with an eye on positioning yourself towards leveraging these types of new technologies?
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure, Stephen, I'll try and take that one. I think, obviously, AI is already incorporated into how we think about running our business. It has been for a while. We continue to look for opportunities to leverage evolving technologies like AI to remove friction for our guests, to create capacity for our associates. We do it in a way that is mindful, mindful of how rapidly the technology is evolving, and mindful of some of the real, important considerations around facets of evolving technology, like privacy.
Stephen Grambling (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks so much.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Steven, the only thing I'll add to that is the reality that at the end of the day, we do believe that it is the person-to-person and the experiential part of our business that, that makes it so unique. Being able to use generational AI in a way that enhances that service, we see as a real benefit, but never to take away from the fundamental people-to-people part of our business.
Stephen Grambling (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Right. Before, during, and after the stay.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Right.
Stephen Grambling (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Thanks, Steve.
Operator (participant)
We'll take our next question from Shaun Kelley with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
Hi, good morning, everyone. Good morning, Tony and Leeny.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Morning.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
We continue to get a lot of questions from investors on the, the net unit growth side of the equation and appreciate all the, the color that you gave. Maybe we could just dig in a little further. It looks like at the very high end of the range of what you had provided previously, you trimmed that very modestly, excluding sort of the deal with MGM. Could you talk about just that change and, and more broadly, what you're seeing in the environment? I think the second part of the follow-up would be, you know, as we look a little further out, and I don't want to steal too much thunder from the Analyst Day, but, you know, what are the preconditions necessary to, to think that, hey, maybe this year could actually be, you know, close to the trough?
What, what would have to go right to see, let's call it core growth, ex City Express and ex MGM, actually improve in 2024 or beyond?
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure. Shaun, let me start, and then, I'm sure Leeny will chime in. On your first question, you're right. There is a very modest, kind of a 20 bps adjustment at the high end to the guidance. You know, we are delighted with the impact of this terrific MGM deal to so meaningfully increase our, our guidance for net unit growth for 2023. That little tweak at the high end really is reflective of kind of normal ins and outs. On the, on the plus side, we've seen little lower deletions to the system than we had visibility into a quarter ago. Then we've seen a handful of projects that we still are confident will open, but we've seen the timing of a handful of those openings slip into early 2024.
It's those ins and outs that led to that modest tweak to the high end of the guidance. On your second question, you know, I would suggest to you that last year was probably the bottom of the trough. The numbers we've seen, particularly on the conversion front, are leading strong growth towards that mid-single digit unit growth that you've become accustomed to in your time covering Marriott. I think in terms of, of continued improvement, you'll hear a little more of this from Leeny. I think the biggest thing we're hoping for now is continued relief from the constriction we see in the debt markets in the U.S. and Europe for new construction. We're seeing powerful interest on the conversion side.
We're seeing no shortage of developer interest or availability of equity. I think the one impediment we're seeing is, it's not an absolute, absence of debt, but we're not seeing the free-flowing debt we saw, a few quarters ago.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Shaun, the only other thing that I would add is the reality that you've heard us talk more and more about multi-unit conversions, which does make things a little bit lumpier on the rooms growth. If you remember when we added a big slug of all-inclusive rooms a couple years ago, when you look at the MGM deal that we recently announced, you know, I take your point that M&A would be looked at separately. I do think on the conversion side, you should continue to see us chasing these lovely multi-unit conversion opportunities that can bounce the numbers around a little bit, but definitely give us confidence in our mid-single digit net rooms growth number as we look forward.
Shaun Kelley (Senior Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you very much, and congrats on the MGM deal.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Great. Thanks, Shaun.
Operator (participant)
We will take our next question from Jeff, or I'm sorry, from Joe Greff with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Joe Greff (Managing Director)
Good morning, everybody.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Hey, Joe.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Hey, Joe.
Joe Greff (Managing Director)
I have two questions. One, what's embedded in your full year fee guidance for Incentive Management Fees? It looked like in the 2Q IMF, per managed room was up a nice 13% over 2019. You know, how does what you have incorporated in full year guidance for IMF, how does that compare on a per room, managed room basis to 2019, both domestically and internationally?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Joe, we can, we can work through the per room. You know, obviously, we've got the reality that the system overall is about 11% bigger than it was in 2019. Those comparisons start to be a little bit less meaningful. To your point about where IMFs should be for the full year, I think what you've seen in what we reported today clearly points to the reality that we hope, assuming things continue the way our guidance predicts, is a number of IMFs that exceeds our 2019 peak by a good amount. The, the amount of percentage of hotels earning incentive fees so far is 62% in Q2 versus 72% in 2019.
We are clearly getting much closer, and in Asia Pacific, it's in the mid-80s in both years. As you know, we have got a different structure of IMF in Asia Pacific, and as our growth has been outsized in that region, they have a very positive quality of behaving much more like base fees. I think you should continue to see strong growth there. In Q2, we were looking at about 41% coming from the U.S. and Canada, and 30% coming from Asia Pacific. We are getting much closer to our 2019 proportion of incentive fees. And again, as we talked about before, when we look for the rest of the year, we do see the reality that we expect IMFs to be higher than our peak.
Joe Greff (Managing Director)
Great, thank you. My follow-up relates to the MGM deal that you recently announced. Can you talk about broadly the economics and how it works for you? I know it kind of works in a couple of ways, what you put in MGM's portfolio and then what you get kind of once they're in the Marriott system as the newer people exporting out to your properties around the world. Let's say the direct channel is such where you're putting in 5%-10% of MGM's occupied rooms night, room nights per year. How much of that in direct annual fees could something like that generate? Can you give us some sort of way of thinking about the fee magnitude?
I know it's probably different than the average, franchise and licensing fee per, per room. Helping us understand the economics there, I think, would be helpful. Thanks.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Yeah. It, it may not surprise you, Joe. We're not going to go into granular detail, on the, the economics of a specific deal. What I can tell you is, the, the structure of the transaction is, is akin to, much more akin to a traditional franchise deal. We are getting paid on room revenue, across their U.S. portfolio of 17 resorts. It's not just a, some sort of loyalty lockup. It is, it's structured to look a lot more like a franchise agreement. The reason it- we talk about it as a strategic licensing agreement, it's more broad than what we had with The Cosmopolitan, which was in fact, a straight franchise agreement.
Here, we've got a much broader ability with the creation of the MGM Collection portfolio to make this a much bigger play for our 186 million Bonvoy members, in terms of the ability to give them access to the wealth of content that MGM makes available, to link the 186 million Bonvoy members and the 40 million MGM Rewards members, and as a corollary, to be a loyalty partner with that MGM. We've, we've called it a strategic licensing agreement because of some of those complexities. In terms of the way we've structured the financial arrangements, you should think about it more through the lens of a, a more traditional franchise agreement structure.
Joe Greff (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
You're welcome.
Operator (participant)
We'll take our next question from Richard Clarke with Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Richard Clarke (Managing Director)
Good morning, thanks. Thanks for taking my question. I just got a question on the remaining occupancy slice you've got to get back. Your occupancy today is still sitting about 4% lower, than it was in 2019. You know, how much confidence you can get the rest of that back? And is there any need to cut prices to get that back in? Is there any price elasticity you need to drive to get the remaining bit of occupancy back in the system?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
I'll.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Yeah, so. Go ahead.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
No, you go, Tony.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
No, no, I was just going to say, yeah, you're, you're right, Richard. We're still down about 3 points on our global basis. You know, but we, we see some real opportunities for growth. As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we continue to see steady recovery on the business transient side, which gives us some optimism, and we continue to see continued recovery on cross-border travel, which gives us another layer of optimism. Then I would say third- as I mentioned, in Greater China, which is our second-largest market, you've still only got about a 40% recovery of cross-border airline capacity. So in terms of inbound and outbound international travel related to China, we think there's some real opportunity for occupancy recovery there as well.
Lastly, you've heard us talk about this the last couple quarters, but we continue to see in the data, real legs to this phenomenon of blended trip purpose, and we think that's going to continue to drive occupancy, particularly in the days of the week that historically we considered shoulder days.
Richard Clarke (Managing Director)
Thanks. Maybe, maybe just as a follow-up to that, your, your, your, your kind of composite U.S. and Canada luxury, you know, RevPAR down year-on-year in the quarter. I mean, how much are you putting that down to the international travel moving overseas from the U.S., or is there some overall price moderation that's going on within luxury properties there?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
I'll start, Tony, and feel free to jump in. A couple things. Certainly, we do attribute it to the reality that a year ago in Q2, there were meaningfully fewer choices for travel. There, there really were consistent restrictions for going overseas, less airlift, et cetera. And I, there's clear that when you look at the travel patterns this year, that there is a big exodus of Americans going over to Europe and other places in the world. That certainly had an impact. The other thing I will say is that on luxury in the U.S., we actually saw a strengthening in the metropolitan areas, and they, in general, have a little bit lower RevPAR than some of the resorts. Some of this is a bit of a mix shift.
As you saw, the rates hardly moved in U.S. and Canada in Q2, and that was off of a year last year in Q2, where luxury rates were extraordinary. Just as a reminder, luxury rates have in U.S. and Canada, have actually outpaced inflation when you compare to 2019, and that still is the case, while the other segments are coming more and more in line with inflation-adjusted rates, as they continued to gain. As you saw, ADR up 4% in the second quarter. As we also said in our prepared remarks, there is a normalization going on. There's definitely a more seasonal pattern to travel and a, frankly, a nice sturdy mix of leisure, business, transient, and group that supports pricing going forward for the industry, we think.
Richard Clarke (Managing Director)
Understood. Thanks very much.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
David Katz (Managing Director)
Hi, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to just focus on the capital returns for a bit, you know, which had a significant bump. Again, my sense is that this is something you'll discuss in an analyst meeting. Can you help us just look out a little bit and assume, you know, that the business momentum continues, and maybe just help us calibrate how you think about the growth in that, you know, capital return, if we can make our own assumptions about where the business would go?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Sure. Thanks for the question. You're, you're right. The adjusted EBITDA and strong cash flow, kind of move upward in our guidance has given us a view to increase our expected capital returns this year. Just in basic math, the midpoint of our EBITDA moved up approximately, roughly $150 million, about half of it outperforming Q2, about half of it increased guidance in the back half of the year. If you just kind of simply take that and lever it, it's, it's pretty, pretty straightforward about how you see the increased capital returns.
I do want to go back to our first, kind of the most important thing, which is that we first want to invest in our business to grow, and we want to do that in a way that provides returns, that are attractive for our shareholders and do it in ways that kind of meet our strategic objectives. That is always first on the list, and then a consideration of how we see the business moving forward. We do have a more diversified earning stream than we had before. We've got a more global earning stream than we've had before. We've got strong operating leverage in the business.
I would expect to continue to see this investing in the growth of our business, including our technology transformation, but then with the remaining cash, excess cash, being able to return it to our shareholders in this mix of a modest dividend and share repurchase.
David Katz (Managing Director)
Got it. If I can, as my follow-up, just ask about really the top-tier corporate business. I know there was some of this in your prepared remarks, you know, as we talk through the industry or industry-related people, we get a sense that there's sort of a, you know, Fortune 100 that's been slower to come back versus the SME that was much, much faster. An update there would be really helpful if there was some movement at the top, as well.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure. Your characterization is accurate. The SMEs, which represent about 60% of our business, transient segment, they were first fully recovered a quarter ago. Their demand continues to be quite robust. The large corporate room nights continue to be recovering a bit more slowly. In Q1, you know, we saw kind of slow and steady recovery. That continues to be the pace. What we hear from them anecdotally, from one perspective, they continue to meet a great deal as they hire new staff, as they immerse them in their culture and do training meetings. We think that's one of the drivers of the strength we're seeing in the group segment.
Their international travel has been the slowest component of their travel to recover. So, you know, it's a segment that we're monitoring closely, but it is certainly recovering more slowly than the SMEs.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
The only thing I'll add, Dave, is that on, on the special corporate rate, I think it is worth noting that you've heard us talk before, that we got nearly double-digit increases in negotiated rate this year. As we look out to next year, we do, you know, we're, we're starting to have those conversations, and we are looking for an additional meaningful increase next year as well. While you're right that some, the classic Big Four and tech firms, are still down in nights, meaningfully compared to 2019, overall business transient is up compared to 2019, and we are continuing to see some recovery. We do eventually think that it will, kind of get back to, you know, levels that we saw in 2019 on the special corporate side eventually.
Again, overall business transient is doing well from a revenue perspective.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Yeah, Dave, maybe just one clarification and additional comment. On the recovery of the SMEs, we saw them fully recover in Q1 of 2022, not 2023, just to make sure I'm precise. The other thing I will tell you is, while the recovery of the large corporates has been not as rapid as what we've seen with the SMEs, we do see strong enough demand, even with the large corporates, that it is giving us pretty good pricing power, as we talked about a couple quarters ago. One of the underpinnings of the rate growth we saw in the quarter was our ability to negotiate high single-digit special corporate rates for 2023.
As we start in earnest to go into corporate rate negotiations for 2024, we have every expectation that we will be emerging from that, that rate negotiation season having achieved high single digit rate negotiated rates for the second straight year.
Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director)
Got it. Thank you very much.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
You're welcome.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Smedes Rose with Citi. Please go ahead.
Smedes Rose (Director)
Hi, thank you. I just wanted to ask you a little bit about the, the loyalty program, and I'm sorry if you've shared this already, but what percentage of occupancy came through loyalty members in the quarter? Could you just touch on maybe what you're seeing on direct bookings versus the percentage of bookings coming, coming through OTAs?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Yeah, sure. Just real quickly, overall, mid-50s for Bonvoy penetration, low 60s for U.S. and Canada. When you look at, we are still kind of mid-70s for a direct contribution, direct channel contribution for our bookings, and the OTA is 11%-12%. Again, fairly stable. The main point is that our when you think about the digital channels, they have gained meaningfully more share over the past several years than the OTAs and grown very nicely. When you look, just kind of one last data point for you, when you think about redemptions as a percentage of our total room nights, it's 6%, and digital is mid-30s.
Smedes Rose (Director)
Okay. Okay, thank you. I was just wondering, can you talk a little bit more about how you guys are thinking about credit card fee growth? You mentioned it was up double-digit. I mean, I don't know if you can say, but is it driven by incremental spending, sort of on a same-store basis, or is it more driven by just more cards going out there? Maybe how would you think about the sort of longer-term growth rate in that fee stream?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Sure. All of the above. You've got, you know, great news in terms of adding cardholders. That, that is a obviously critical component to this, is adding additional cardholders, and we're very pleased with adding additional cardholders. Obviously, it's the average spend on those existing cardholders. As you see growth in those two, you get the growth in credit card. But just as importantly, is adding new countries. When we add a South Korea, a Japan, a China, you know, it really opens up a new market that goes from zero to thousands of cards with growth potential that goes off many years into the future. We are continuing to add additional countries.
You know, we'll talk more in September about kind of how to think about that in a three-year model. As I said, for this year, I think you, you can be looking at them for overall total, credit card branding fees to be in about the roughly 10% range.
Smedes Rose (Director)
Thank you. Well, I can attest that my kids are helping on the fee growth for you. Thanks for your comments.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Well, thanks. We, we appreciate the support.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Dori Kesten with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Thanks. Good morning.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Good morning.
Dori Kesten (Director)
Where do you feel that your, your gaps by region or brand, brand type exist today?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
I'll start.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
I'll start, Tony, and then, and then you jump in. I, I think, you've heard us talk about our entry into the affordable midscale space since the acquisition of City Express in CALA, and with our conversation about MidX Studios, which is a midscale extended stay product that we're very excited about in the U.S. and are having great conversations with owners. Really, we look at that around the world as providing great opportunities for us, in addition to growing all of our other brands. I mean, I, I think it's important to note that, that we think there's lots of room for us to have growth across all segments around the world in our existing brands.
For example, we're excited about what we see as the possibility for a conversion midscale brand in EMEA, and look forward to some announcements in the back half of the year regarding that. We'll continue to look to try to meet our customers' needs and expand our distribution in a way that strengthens Bonvoy.
Dori Kesten (Director)
Okay. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Bill Crow with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Bill Crow (Managing Director)
Hey, good morning. Tony, you talked about normalization in the U.S. We talked about it as well. In the last, I don't know, six weeks or so, we've seen RevPAR in the U.S. ±1%, maybe up to 2%. Just curious what it is that you can look at and say, you know, the real normalized rate might return more to 3%-4%. What, what are the drivers out there to get us off this sub-inflationary growth, growth rate?
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Yeah, good question, Bill. I'd point to a few things, and maybe I'll try to answer you going segment by segment. You know, I talked in my prepared remarks about the leisure segment being up in the quarter 10%. One of the things that was really encouraging to me in the leisure segment was that that 10% improvement was split almost perfectly evenly by both occupancy and rate improvement. We saw 5% improvement in ADR, which I thought was quite encouraging. Similarly. That was a global number. Pivoting to the U.S., which I think was your question, in the U.S. and Canada, we talked a little bit about group.
Some of the, the pricing power we're seeing in group as evidenced, by the revenue, pace we're seeing, not only in the back half of 2023, where we're pacing up 11% in revenue, but also where we're seeing in 2024, where we're now pacing up 14%, which is already up 5 points, just, three months, since the last time we talked to you about group pace. Then, as you heard from Leeny, when she was asking one of the earlier questions about business transient, you had 6% ADR growth in business transient in the U.S. and Canada, which I think is another data point. When you throw all that in the blender together, all of that gives us some comfort that there is some opportunity.
The only thing I would say to you, and you heard Leeny reference this, we do expect year-over-year, ADR to moderate a bit, given some of the, the comparisons, particularly as we get into year three, or excuse me, Q3 and Q4. We do expect ADR to continue to grow through the back half of the year.
Bill Crow (Managing Director)
Great. That was it for me. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Duane Pfennigwerth with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.
Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director)
Hey, good morning, and congrats on these results. If we just play back your guidance revisions since the start of the year on international, we know Europe is strong, but how would you rank other international regions in terms of the contribution to that guidance revision? If you would, it might be early here, but any early thoughts on domestic versus international growth rates into 2024?
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure. Let me talk maybe a little bit about China, and then I'll let Leeny do the, the balance of the tour around the world. I talked in my prepared remarks about how encouraged we are about the recovery in China, and the fact that, that Greater China, as a market, surpassed pre-pandemic RevPAR in the quarter. It was able to, to achieve those results principally on the shoulders of domestic demand, given some of the stats that I shared on the relatively modest recovery of international airline capacity. One of the stats that was really encouraging to me, if you look at Q2 RevPAR in Greater China, we were up almost 125% to last year.
I think that speaks to the strength and pace of recovery of that market, but it also speaks to the quality of our distribution, particularly in the major markets like Beijing and Shanghai. Leeny, you want to maybe talk a little about APAC and EMEA?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Sure. I think a lot of this is just about acceleration of recovery. If you think about it, it's a little bit hard to predict exactly how airlift is going to go and how cross-border travel and how a country is going to emerge from the pandemic. I think the reality is that the recovery in China has come faster than we expected. Cross-border, while it, it is still meaningfully lower in China than it was pre-COVID, we've, we've got international airlift only at 40% of pre-COVID levels, so there's clearly more room to grow. There's no doubt that as that country has rebounded and as the rest of Asia Pacific has also really opened its borders completely, we've seen that all of the travel there has picked up very fast.
When I kind of go back to where, at the beginning of the year, where you might have imagined, Greater China and Asia Pacific outside of China, they are both up the most. I think the only other comment I would make is that obviously Europe this summer has dramatically outperformed expectations. We continue to see really strong demand in Caribbean and Latin America and Middle East, Africa. International really benefiting from all the cross-border travel and frankly, from a global economy that has probably been a bit stronger than everyone anticipated at the beginning of the year.
Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director)
Appreciate, appreciate that detailed response. Maybe just a quick follow-up on MGM. Does that effectively franchise agreement cover all of their revenue or just revenue generated through your channels, through marriott.com, through Bonvoy, et cetera? Thanks for taking the questions.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Sure.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Yeah, of course. Oh, go ahead, Leeny.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
I was just say, we're, we're not going to get into the details of the calculation, but it is based on hotel revenues, so it is not an à la carte sort of, sort of deal.
Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director)
Okay. Thank you very much.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Robin Farley with UBS. Please go ahead.
Robin Farley (Managing Director and Leisure Analyst)
Great, thanks. Just circling back to the MGM deal. I guess it's my understanding that even though it's a great partnership, that MGM would not be paying you franchise fees the way we would normally think about rooms in your pipeline, paying sort of 4%-6% franchise fees. I don't know if you can just clarify, you know, whether they would be paying franchise fees the way we would normally think of your, your franchise fees being. My second question is, the way the release is written, and I apologize if I'm interpreting this incorrectly, but it sounds like you're counting the MGM rooms in your rooms under construction.
I'm just wondering, is there some reason why you would count it as new construction versus more of a conversion, if I'm, if I'm interpreting that correctly? Then also, if I'm interpreting that correctly, your rooms under construction, excluding the MGM rooms, it is like 30% of your pipeline, whereas kind of historically, it had been in the, you know, kind of the high 40% range, closer to 50%. Just thinking about rooms like physically under construction, as a percent of your pipeline being, you know, a bit lower. Obviously, there's, we know what's going on in the macro environment, but it, it seems like that would have implications for 2024 openings, if the rooms under construction are, in fact, that low, if I'm interpreting it correctly from how you're counting MGM in the construction pipeline. Thanks.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure. I think there's three questions in there. I'll try to hit all three, Robin. On the first one, as Leeny mentioned, while we're not going to disclose the specific deal terms, this is structured very similar to a franchise agreement where we are receiving a royalty fee on rooms revenue. This is not an, as Leeny termed it, an à la carte, where we're only getting paid on fees generated just through our proprietary channels. I do think you should think about it through the lens of a more traditional franchise fee structure.
On your second question, we typically do conversions, pending opening in our system, are typically included as rooms under construction, because they typically have some measure of property improvement plan, improvements and construction before they come into our system. Even in the case of MGM, with extraordinary quality assets, there are, for instance, some life safety improvements and some other physical improvements that are required to those assets, before they will be plugged into the system, and that's why they're characterized in that way. And on your third question, I'm doing the math just in my brain, so we can do it more precisely for you. If you take the quarter-end pipeline and you back out those numbers, or back out the MGM, we would have been a little over 500,000 rooms in the pipeline.
If you back the MGM numbers out of the under construction, we would have been a little over 200,000, so it would have been 40%-ish under construction versus the 30% that you referenced. In terms of implications going forward, I'd reference a response I gave you maybe a quarter ago, which is for, I don't recall the precise number, but 20-some odd quarters, despite really strong openings, we've continued consistently to have ±200,000 rooms under construction globally, which I don't think bodes quite well for our continued recovery to mid-single-digit net unit growth.
Robin Farley (Managing Director and Leisure Analyst)
Okay, thanks. Just one quick clarification that I wasn't counting when you gave rooms in your pipeline at quarter end. Just since the MGM deal was announced in July, are you including MGM in that number? It sounds like you are from the math you just walked us through. I just wanted to clarify.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
In the pipeline? Yes, we are. In the 547, yes.
Robin Farley (Managing Director and Leisure Analyst)
It's the.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
That would include, to be more precise, that would include the roughly 37,000 incremental rooms that will come in, not the full 40,000, because the Cosmopolitan is already open and operating in the system, as an Autograph as we sit here today.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
It's included in your June 30 pipeline.
Robin Farley (Managing Director and Leisure Analyst)
Yes. Even the like.
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
Yeah. The deal was signed, the deal was signed before June 30, so it's appropriate that it was in. It was not announced until a few weeks ago, but it was signed.
Robin Farley (Managing Director and Leisure Analyst)
Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Okay, we'll take our next question from Brandt Montour with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Brandt Montour (Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Oh, great. Thanks for squeezing me in here. Just, just one for me, maybe for Tony. If you could just give us a view into the development backdrop in China as it stands today, just sort of the latest lay of the land in terms of starts and construction progress and any sort of acceleration and, and, and sort of how things look on the ground, that would be helpful.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure, of course. Maybe I'll sort of go in, in sequence. We are seeing a very encouraging uptick in the pace of development inquiries, a parallel uptick in the number of signed MOUs, and then parallel committee submissions and approvals. As you'll recall from some of our previous conversations, oftentimes, unlike many other markets around the world, new construction hotels often come into our development process when those structures are well under construction, as opposed to a U.S. deal, where it might come to us as a greenfield site. Many of those under construction buildings had been paused during the pandemic. We have seen parallel encouraging restart of many of those construction projects.
When we think about each of the milestones in the development of a hotel project, or the life cycle of a hotel project, we're seeing encouraging uptick at every one of those milestones across Greater China.
Brandt Montour (Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Perfect. Thanks so much.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
You're welcome.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Aryeh Klein with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Ari Klein (Director of Equity Research)
Thank you. Tony, you mentioned the strength of U.S. travel to overseas markets. Maybe can you update us on what you're seeing as far as international visitation into the U.S. and your outlook there, and maybe what drives the resurgence?
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Sure. I'm going to ask Leeny Oberg to remind me of the exact percentage, but historically, the percentage of inbound international into the U.S. market has historically always been relatively modest, I think sub 5%, if memory serves. As borders open, you're starting to see that recover, but it is not nearly as impactful as outbound U.S. into some of these international markets as we've talked about in the past. Now, the exception to that, I will tell you, is if you look at a couple of individual cities, Ari, and so just to give you a flavor, we were just looking at this the other day. Use New York as an example, and that may not surprise you a great deal.
If you go back to 2019, the international traveler share of transient room nights in New York in 2019 was 12%. In the second quarter, we actually exceeded that. In the second quarter this year, 13% of transient room nights into New York were international inbound. That city really stands out. There's only a handful of other U.S., major U.S. cities that are double-digit. You know, Washington, or excuse me, Miami, is 12% in the quarter. It was about 15% back in 2019. San Francisco was 11% back in 2019. It was actually 10% in the second quarter. Hawaii, the state of Hawaii as a destination, was 12% in 2019, and it was actually 10% in the second quarter.
Hopefully that gives you a bit of a flavor.
Ari Klein (Director of Equity Research)
Yeah, appreciate it. Thank, thanks. Then, in the U.S., specifically, on, on the development pipeline, are you seeing any differences in the ability for owners to finance higher end or, you know, bigger project hotels versus, you know, the smaller ones that, that are maybe more selective focused?
Leeny Oberg (CFO and EVP of Development)
I'll start. Tony, jump in. You know, the, the old saying continues to be true, that proven markets, proven brands, proven developers, proven owners always wins out. That is still the case. It, it really depends on the project. I will say that we've seen such great impact from renovated hotels, that I think there is the reality that a, an existing hotel that is not a new development project, that's not kind of not earning money for quite a while, that those are easier to do, especially when they're turning it into a fantastic representation of a particular brand. I think those are getting done.
I think the reality is that both, with the level of interest rates and the loan-to-values that are being required, is that it's tougher to make these deals pencil. They are happening. They're getting done. They're just not getting done at the same pace that they were before.
Ari Klein (Director of Equity Research)
Thanks for the color.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question from Michael Bellisario with Baird. Please go ahead.
Michael Bellisario (Senior Research Analyst)
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Just wanted to follow up on the MGM deal, but focus on group. A couple parts here. Maybe what's your view on the upside in Vegas for group business at these hotels? Maybe more broadly, how are your sales teams incentivized to put groups into certain hotels? Then, presumably, Vegas is gonna gain share. Maybe what's your view on the markets that lose share as group rotates into Vegas? Thanks.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Maybe I'll try at a high level, and then Leeny, you might want to be a little more granular. Obviously, we think it's a huge win for our group customers. As you know, Michael, the way we sell group is we look at their multiyear rotational needs, and for many of these particularly large groups, Las Vegas is always in their multiyear plan. While we had the ability to offer them The Cosmopolitan, the breadth of offerings we can now make available to them, particularly the largest of those groups that need very significant meeting space, we think we've got a terrific opportunity to keep them within the Marriott Group ecosystem much more effectively. Our sales teams will be collaborating closely, the Marriott and the MGM sales teams, to ensure we capture as much of that demand as possible.
In terms of markets that, that might be impacted by that, most of those groups are rotating through Las Vegas as a destination anyway. I don't think we're, we're deeply concerned that groups going there will be at the expense of those destinations. We just think we have a better probability of capturing that Las Vegas rotation within the Marriott ecosystem.
Operator (participant)
At this time, this will conclude our Q&A, as we are at allotted time. I will turn the call back over to Anthony Capuano for closing remarks.
Tony Capuano (President and CEO)
Great. Well, thank you all for your interest this morning. Wish you safe travels, and we look forward to seeing all of you in Miami in September. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. This does conclude today's program. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time.