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Canada’s biggest hotel buyers? B.C. taxpayers

The British Columbia government was the largest single buyer of hotel properties in Canada during the second quarter, accounting for four of the 12 transactions and more than half the dollar volume. The fact the B.C.
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The Comfort Inn in Victoria is one of the hotels the B.C. government bought this year.

The British Columbia government was the largest single buyer of hotel properties in Canada during the second quarter, accounting for four of the 12 transactions and more than half the dollar volume.

The fact the B.C. transactions — all of which are for supportive housing — are the biggest deals in the country is indicative of a troubled hotel industry reeling from the effects of COVID-19.

“The second quarter was perhaps the toughest on record for hotel owners and operators across the country,” noted Colliers International in its INNvestment Canada hotel report for the second quarter of 2020.

Colliers noted that the “thin levels of transactions” in the second quarter totalled $200 million with the sale of 12 properties across the country. This compares with 36 sales and a total dollar volume of $666 million in the second quarter of 2019.

Four of the transactions were hotels in Vancouver and Victoria, bought by B.C. Housing to temporarily shelter homeless people. The province paid a total of $107 million.

B.C. Housing was also responsible for the single largest deal this year, with its purchase of the 110-room Howard Johnson hotel on Granville Street for $55 million, a price that pencils to about $500,000 per room.

At the start of the third quarter, B.C. Housing also purchased the American Hotel on Main Street, Vancouver, for $17.9 million.

For the first half of this year, hotel sales volumes in Canada totalled $500 million, down from $830 million in the first six months of 2019.

The hotel industry is suffering from pandemic-related travel restrictions that has seen international overnight visitors plunge 92 per cent in the second quarter compared to a year earlier.

All conferences booked into hotels have been cancelled or gone online since the pandemic began.

Nationally, the revenue per available room in Canadian hotels, a key industry metric, is down 54.9 per cent this year compared to 2019, Colliers reports.

Hotel occupancy fell to a record low of 12 per cent in April before recovering to an average of 28.9 per cent in early July, still about half of the rate a year earlier.

In 2019, 16.75 million

non-residents crossed into Canada by car from the U.S., representing 67 per cent of total travel to Canada by US citizens.

For the month of April 2020, just 46,596 non-residents crossed into Canada by automobile, down 97 per cent from the 1.1 million visitors during the same period last year, according to Statistics Canada.

The Canada-U.S. border has been closed to all but essential travel since March 31.

The closure currently remains in effect until Aug. 21, but it could be extended.