摘要

This study uses panel regression tests to examine the response of hotel performance to international tourism development and crisis events in Taiwan Hotel performance measures are revenue (revenue per available room and occupancy rate) profitability (return on assets and return on equity) and stock performance The crises were the earthquake on September 21 1999 (the 9/21 earthquake) the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001 in the US (the 9/11 terrorist attacks) and the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome on April 22 2003 (the SARS outbreak) This study makes four major contributions First test results confirm that international tourism development (ITD) proxied by the growth of total inbound tourist arrivals has a more direct influence on hotel sales and profitability than it does on hotel stock performance Second this study identifies that the absence of a strong tie between ITD and hotel stock returns that was found in previous studies is due to the time-varying discount rate caused by investors changing expectations for the prospect of future cash flows from holding hotel stocks Third this study finds new evidence that while the poor performance of hotel stocks caused by the 9/21 earthquake and the 9/11 terrorist attacks was attributed to the loss of hotel sales revenue the adverse effect of the SARS outbreak on hotel stock returns is attributed not only to decreased hotel sales revenue but also to the increased discount rate Lastly this study is the first to investigate whether the response of hotel stock returns to ITD depends on the state of economy and concludes that the response of hotel stock performance to ITD in business cycle contraction is statistically different from that in business cycle expansion Further although the influen

  • 出版日期2011-3