The hotel business is heading for a downturn just as thousands of new rooms are about to open, the Wall Street Journal reports. One expert sees a .9% fall in demand for hotel rooms this year as the slowing economy keeps travelers at home—the first significant slump since 9/11. At the same time, as many as 260,000 new hotel rooms are slated to come on line this year and next—a 4.6% increase in supply.
"When you put together the supply-and-demand numbers, it's kind of scary," he says. The result is likely to be a decline in revenue per room across the industry—not big trouble for chains like Intercontinental, who can offset a fall in per-room income by building more rooms, but it could mean tough times for boutique hotels and losses for investors in condo-hotel projects. (More hotel stories.)