Airbnb is expected to complete its much anticipated IPO before the end of 2020 and Wall Street analysts are understandably excited, while hospitality industry experts worry that access to cheaper capital would allow Airbnb to increase its share of the current ultra-weak travel demand at the expense of hotels. This year Airbnb's US adult user base is expected to fall 60.0% to 17.0 million, the first time of negative user growth (eMarketer). No wonder, the company's valuation plummeted by 58% to $18 billion in a desperate coronavirus-driven fundraising in April 2020 from its previous high of $31 billion. Due to increased competition, its market share in the U.S. is expected to decrease to under 70% by 2022 from the current level of nearly 73% (eMarketer). The question is, how big of a threat to the hospitality industry, if at all, is Airbnb's upcoming IPO?

Simone Puorto
Simone Puorto
Head of Emerging Trends and Strategic Innovation, Hospitality Net

Unlike most of its competitors, Airbnb was able to turn a profit (even though mainly due to significant cost cuts) even in this turbulent year, with $219 million in Q3. Moreover, the IPO date has been set just weeks after the Pfizer, BioNTech, and Moderna vaccine announcements infused new hope to the industry and made the stocks of competitors such as Expedia Group and Booking Holdings rise. Bottom line is that I would personally buy Airbnb stocks, but that's not the point. My two cents is that the company's IPO will negatively impact hotels' performances, already hit by the COVID-19 crisis and that the only weapons hotel will have to fight back will be to keep lobbying for stricter and more severe regulations for the home-sharing industry.

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