Despite both revenue and bookings dropping more sharply in
Q4 of 2020 than in the prior quarter, Booking Holdings president and CEO Glenn Fogel focused
on the positive to open his call sharing the results with analysts.
Noting that 2020 brought the “biggest disruption to modern
global travel the world has ever seen,” Fogel continues: “However, travelers still
booked 355 million room nights through our platforms during 2020, and we remained
profitable by generating approximately $880 million in adjusted EBITDA. Delivering
these results during this unprecedented year and unpredictable year is a credit
to our team’s relentless efforts to deliver the best value and service to our travel
customers and to our supply partners while all the time remaining incredibly focused
on operating efficiently.”
Considering those full-year 2020 figures in relation to 2019,
of course, paints a less rosy picture. Room nights dropped nearly 58% - down
from 844 million in the prior year - and adjusted EBITDA dropped 85%.
Gross travel bookings for the year were valued at $35.4
billion, a 63% decrease compared to 2019, and total revenues in 2020 were $6.8
billion, a 55% decrease from the prior year.
Fourth quarter results were also noticeably down compared to
Q3 of 2020 – although less sharply than expected, says Fogel.
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Gross travel bookings in Q4 were $7.3 billion – nearly half
of the $13.4 billion recorded in the prior quarter and a 65% decrease compared
to the fourth quarter of 2019. Room nights booked were $76 million, down from $127
million in Q3 and a 60% drop compared to Q4 2019.
Total revenue for the fourth quarter was $1.2 billion, a 63%
decrease year-over-year and just half the revenue reported for Q3 ($2.6
billion). And adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was a loss of $38 million,
compared with adjusted EBITDA of $1.3 billion in Q4 2019.
Marketing expenses were down 61% in the fourth quarter to
$386 million from $992 million in Q4 2019. For the full year, marketing expenses
came in at $2.2 billion, down from $5 billion in 2019. And the company reduced its staff by about 23% in 2020, resulting in an annualized cost savings of about $370 million in personnel expenses.
Control “what we can control”
With the pace of recovery still uncertain due to new COVID-19 cases, border restrictions and the uneven distribution of vaccines, Fogel says
the company is focused on what it can control, guided by three priorities:
expanding the payment platform on Booking.com, building the connected trip
capabilities and growing market share in the United States.
Fogel says 22% of Booking.com’s gross bookings in 2020 were
processed on its integrated payment platform, up from 15% in 2019, and he
expects that number to continue to grow.
“It is strategically important as it enables merchandising
capabilities that we haven’t had access to historically at Booking.com, but we
expect to utilize selectively in the future to help drive growth. In addition,
this payment platform is foundational for enabling our connected trip strategy,”
he says.
Another priority tied to the connected trip vision is
building a “robust flight product” on Booking.com.
“It gives us the ability to engage with flight bookers early
in their travel journey and allows an opportunity to cross-sell our accommodations
and other products to those bookers,” Fogel says.
“In the coming years we expect flights will represent an
increasing mix of our overall business, which will help drive incremental
revenue and EBITDA dollars.”
Underlying the various elements of the connected trip – products
across accommodations, flights, ground transportation, attractions and dining,
all connected by the payment network and personalized support – is a goal of
driving increased loyalty and frequency.
“Getting people to come back to us directly is a critical
strategy going forward,” Fogel says.
And regarding the third priority of capturing more market
share in the United States, Fogel says an important part of that will be to
build Booking.com’s alternative accommodation business.
“While we have built a large and competitive alternative
accommodation business globally, we believe we have a significant opportunity
to improve it in the U.S., which will involve product improvements, supply
acquisition and raising consume awareness of this type of inventory on Booking.com,”
he says.
Fogel says the company needs to grow its supply of single-home properties, and it expects to do that faster and more efficiently by
working with professional property management partners.
When asked about the status of the company’s relationship
with hotel suppliers – after some criticized Booking Holdings early in the pandemic
– Fogel says the company is helping partners in a variety of ways, including providing
strategies related to promotions, revenue management and content development.
“I do believe in terms of relationships, certainly as a distributor,
when there is less demand, we are more valuable as a partner to them,” he says.
“In the time when there is very, very high occupancy rates, any
hotel will say, 'Well, I don’t need the distributor nearly as much.' But when they
don’t have the high occupancy rate then they start looking for demand. And we
have the benefit of being the largest platform for hotel demand in the world.”