Thank you very much. Welcome to this presentation of Pandox, Q4 and year-end report for 2023. I'm here together with Liia Nõu, our CEO, and Anneli Lindblom, our CFO. With us today, we also have Thomas Emanuel, Senior Director at STR. STR is a leading independent research firm focused on the hotel market, and Thomas is here to share STR's view on the market. Please remember that the views expressed by STR are completely separate from Pandox, and the presentation is offered only as a service to Pandox stakeholders. As always is the case, Thomas' presentation will be held after we have completed our formal earnings presentation, including the Q&A.
Before we let Thomas in, Liia and Anneli will present a business update with financial highlights for the fourth quarter and the full year, followed by the Q&A session. And just one more thing before we kick off the presentation. We have renamed our two business segments to Leases, previously Property Management, and Own Operations, previously Operator Activities. It's a name change only, and it does not affect our reporting, or accounting principles in any way. With that, I hand over to Liia Nõu, the CEO of Pandox.
Thank you, Anders, and good morning, everyone, and welcome. I would like to start this presentation with a couple of key investment highlights on Pandox. We are active in travel and tourism, a global and highly dynamic industry with strong structural growth drivers. Travel and tourism is one of the largest industries in the world, accounting for almost 10% of global GDP and a substantial share of new jobs created. We only invest in hotel properties. We are the largest listed pure hotel property owner in Europe, with a unique portfolio of high-quality assets. We are an active owner with deep hotel expertise, and we work with all operational models and are focused on creating value across the whole value chain. We have inflation-protected revenue streams and minimum guaranteed rent from strong and skilled operators, which provide both upside and stability.
We have a high-quality project pipeline, which we will expect to accelerate our organic earnings and value growth through 2024 and 2026 onwards. We have ambitious ESG targets, including a substantial climate transition program with high ROI. Our property portfolio has an average valuation yield of approximately 6.24%, mainly with long leases and a WALT of 15 years. And with average interest cost of 4.2, it's a positive yield spread of 200 basis points, 2%. And finally, we have only bank financing with strong and positive relationships and low refinancing risk. Our business is to own, improve, and lease hotel properties to strong hotel operators under long-term revenue-based leases. We do this through four principal value activities: property management, property development, portfolio optimization, and sustainability. We are an active and engaged owner based on deep hotel expertise.
We have two operational models, leases and own operations. Leases is our core business with stable and predictable cash flows, and own operation is a unique transformation tool, which enables us to take on and develop underperforming assets with the objective to sign new leases. And I will come back to some examples later on in this presentation. We have a strong and well-diversified hotel property portfolio. We have 159 hotel properties with approximately 36,000 rooms in 12 countries and 90 cities, and with a property market value of some SEK 69 billion, with an average yield of 6.24. We are divided into two mutually supportive and reinforcing business segments, now named Leases and Own Operations. In leases, we own and lease out hotel properties, again, to skilled hotel operators under long revenue-based agreements, often with a minimum guarantee level.
This is about 83% of our property market value. In own operations, we transform and run hotels in properties we own, and this makes up for some 17% of our market value, property market value. The focus of our portfolio is upper-mid-market hotels with mostly domestic demand, which is the backbone of the hotel market, regardless of which phase the hotel market cycle is in. We have one of the strongest networks of brands and partners in the hotel property industry, and this ensures efficient operations and revenue management, which in turn maximizes cash flow and property values, and a continuous flow of business opportunities. Also, a relatively large part of investment in leases is also shared with the tenant, which lowers our risk.
The hotel market continued its recovery in the fourth quarter, with more meetings, increased international travel, and higher activity in larger cities, supporting both occupancy rates and average prices. That said, international travel and larger meetings and conferences still have some way to go before having fully recovered compared with 2019. Total net operating income increased by 12%, supported by 10% growth for leases and 20% for own operations. Like for like, total net operating income rose with 7%, as we have some translation headwinds from stronger Swedish krona. Cash earnings decreased by 19% due to higher interest expense and higher than normal current tax in the quarter. Anneli will talk a little bit more about taxes later in the presentation.
Our financial flexibility remains high, with an LTV of 46.6% and an ICR of 2.7, based on a rolling four quarters. We have 100% bank financing, strong relationships, and positive discussions on the upcoming refinancing. So our refinancing lease risk is low. Based on the normalization of the hotel market and a stable financial position, the board proposes a dividend of 4 SEK per share, compared with 2.5 SEK last year. This corresponds to approximately 42% of cash earnings per share, the cash earnings, sorry, and a dividend yield of approximately 2.9% based on the share closing price yesterday. To round this section off, I would also like to highlight that we have a high-quality investment pipeline, which will improve our future growth outlook. Next page. During the fourth quarter, we signed two new leases.
The first one for Hotel Mayfair Copenhagen, with Strawberry, for a Hobo to open in 2025. The second one for Hotel Pomander in Nürnberg, with Scandic, which will come into force March 1 this year. Both leases are revenue-based with a minimum level. They confirm our ability to create value by acquiring, developing, and improving underperforming hotel properties in an international environment as well. They are also good examples of our model, where we, through deep hotel knowledge and property expertise, transform hotel properties based on their unique characteristics. And with these agreements, we have secured an important step in the property's value journey, and we are looking forward to work with both Scandic and Strawberry to further increase the value of the hotel product and the hotel property. Next page.
Here we see a comparison of the RevPAR level for our business segment leases from 2019 until today. The numbers are on a comparable basis, and as you can see, RevPAR is currently trading above the corresponding period, 2019. ADR continues to be the main driver, with a strong to very strong average price development in most markets. Here we have the breakdown of the performance for a selection of countries, regions, and cities versus 2019. You've seen this before. The first chart tracks the year-to-date performance to September, and the second chart tracks the year-to-date December. We show ADR on the vertical axis and occupancy on the horizontal axis. Thus, origin is the point corresponding to 2019 on both ADR and occupancy.
In the boxes, we indicate how much higher or lower RevPAR is compared with the corresponding period, 2019. In the fourth quarter, the hotel market was largely stable compared with the third quarter. Year to date in December, all markets, except Helsinki, traded above or well above 2019 levels on rate, whereas the majority still remained somewhat below 2019 levels on occupancy in percentage terms. However, in some cities, new capacity have been coming in, so the actual numbers of rooms sold, we are on 2019 levels or even above in some cities. And the good part is, it's not so much new capacity coming in going forward. In terms of RevPAR from the third to the fourth quarter, the greatest relative improvement began to take place in select cities in Germany, such as Hanover, Frankfurt, and Hamburg.
Thomas Emanuel from STR will talk more about the underlying trends in the European hotel market later in this call. So broadly speaking, for the month of November, European hotel demand has recovered to 2019 levels. RevPAR in all our regional markets is trading above 2019, with U.K. and Norway being the strongest ones, closely followed by Sweden and Finland. Among the Nordic capital cities, Oslo is clearly the strongest, followed by Stockholm. Copenhagen was stable in the fourth quarter, and RevPAR largely back at 2019 levels, whereas Helsinki continues to suffer from the lack of Asian and Russian demand. I said it before, in these two cities, there has been a strong inflow of new hotel rooms in the past two years, about 30% since 2019.
Against this backdrop, the recovery, especially in Copenhagen, is particularly impressive. In the fourth quarter, we took several important steps within sustainability. In November, we got our science-based targets validated by SBTi. The first target is a 42% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 in own operations. This is Scope one and two. And the second target is a 25% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 in leases. This is our Scope three. And just before the approval, the board decided on a climate transition project of EUR 320 million to meet the SBTi targets in our own operations when completed in 2027. The main activity is the phasing out of oil and gas, but also upgrades of technical systems for energy optimization and investment in renewable energy solutions.
This project will generate cost savings of some EUR 3 million per year, with full effect in 2027. Based on the validated SBTi targets, we could also sustainability link existing bank loans with two banks, corresponding to approximately SEK 2.2 billion. And we see good conditions to sustainability link the majority of our loans going forward as well. Next page. Here, we have listed larger investment projects in our existing portfolio. Hotel Komander opened the 18th of September, after having been closed for an extensive renovation since the third quarter 2021. And the rest of the projects are expected to be completed during the second half of this year and late 2025.
All in all, we expect them to generate some +SEK 300 million in additional net operating income per year, with full effect in 2026, and of which approximately SEK 130 million or so will come in, in 2024. On top of these projects, we are continuously adding new ones to our pipeline, which will further add to our growth outlook. Next page, and with that, I hand over to Anneli Lindblom.
Thank you, Liia. So good morning, everyone. We are happy to report good numbers also for the fourth quarter. Like-for-like growth was positive, both in revenue and in net operating income, supported by a continued recovery in the hotel market with many active demand segments. Total revenue-based rents increased to SEK 324 million, compared to SEK 286 million last year. Own operations performed well in the fourth quarter, supported by increased business demands. Cash earnings decreased by 19% in the fourth quarter, and there are two reasons for this. Firstly, of course, higher interest expense, and secondly, higher current tax, which is explained by the fact that we now are in tax position in Sweden and in Germany, but also higher tax expense due to rules limiting deductible interest, and that is particularly in the U.K.
On this slide, we show the change in demand valuation parameters for the total property portfolio year-over-year. Please remember that investment properties are recognized at fair value. According to IFRS, unrealized changes in value for operating properties are only reported for information purpose, but it is included in EPRA NRV. In 2023, we had a positive contribution from investment and acquisitions. Currency had a slight negative effect. As you know, we have the main part of our hotel properties outside Sweden and denominated in foreign currencies. In the fourth quarter, the SEK strengthened, which turned a previous positive contribution from currency to negative for the year. The most important factor on the negative side is, however, unrealized changes in value. For the full year, the total portfolio, this amounted to a net negative SEK 1.7 billion.
Of this, SEK -5.2 billion was attributed to higher average yields. This was in turn, offset by some two-thirds by the positive cash flows of SEK 3.5 billion. The main reason for the higher cash flow is a strong average price development in large parts of the portfolio. Measured from the beginning of the year, the increase in average valuation yield was 0.51 percentage points, and for investment properties, and 0.52 percentage points for operating properties. End of period, the average valuation yield for investment properties was 6.09%, and for operating properties, it was 7.02%. Here we have the average yield, the average interest on debt, and EPRA NRV per share quarterly from just before the pandemic and up until today.
When it comes to the yield, I just want to remind you that the changes in value recorded during and immediately after the pandemic were largely an effect of changing in cash flow. Cash flow were adjusted downwards during the pandemic and adjusted upwards when the recovery started after it. Both in internal and in external valuation, while yields were stable. However, in line with rising market interest rates, yields have moved higher since the fourth quarter, 2022. Despite higher yields and higher market interest rates, EPRA NAV per share has increased compared with 2019, and have a tangible and positive yield spread. Also, growth in EPRA NAV was a slight - 0.7%, measured on an annual basis, adjusted for paid dividends.
As you can see, at the end of the third quarter, the LTV was 46.6%, and the ICR on rolling twelve-month was 2.7 x. The LTV remains at the lower end of our loan-to-value ratio in our financial policy, and the ICR is resilient. Cash and unutilized credit facilities amounted to more than SEK 3.1 billion at the end of the quarter. Also, please note that we have an encumbered asset as an untapped reserve. Pandox has two sources of financing. We have equity and bank loans secured by underlying properties. We have no market financing in the form of bonds and no external rating requirements. Given our business model, with focus on hotels and variable rent, this has proven to be the most efficient and predictable financing over time.
On the right, we highlight our capital structure at the end of the period. Based on the closing price yesterday, Pandox is valued at a discount to EPRA NAV of 31%. During the year, we were very active on refinancing, with a total amount of SEK 15.3 billion. In the fourth quarter, we refinanced SEK 1.5 billion. Refinancing during the year have been made at longer durations, and our average debt repayment period has increased year-on-year to 2.3 years. Looking ahead, we have approximately SEK 9 billion of debt maturing within one year, of which SEK 5.5 million is in the second half of the year. We have strong relations with our banks, and as always, discussions on future refinancing are ongoing and positive. Overall, credit margins are stable, and our refinancing risk is low.
At the moment, we have 76% of the net debt hedged, which means that the effect from further increase in market rates is relatively low. With that, I'll hand back to Liia for some final remarks.
Thank you, Anneli. We expect RevPAR growth in 2024. There's a strong event calendar in Europe, European Football Championship, Euro 2024 in Germany, and the Olympic Games in France, especially exciting. Business on books so far is higher than the same time last year. Surveys also indicate that companies plan to increase their travel budgets in 2024. The lower inflation and hopefully lower interest rates should be positive for household spending and leisure travel as well. Generally speaking, hotel demand is dependent on economic activity, and the main risks are geopolitical instability and its effects on economic activity and travel. We have had our fair share of instability, but so far, the concerns have not materialized.
That said, with a high-quality portfolio, an active and engaged ownership model based on deep hotel expertise, strong project pipeline, and low financing risk, we are well-prepared for value creation in any market scenario. Next page. We now move over to Q&A. Operator, we are now ready for questions.
If you wish to ask a question, please dial pound key five on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. If you wish to withdraw your question, please dial pound key six on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Fredrik Stensved from ABG Sundal Collier. Please go ahead.
Thank you. I hope you can hear me, good morning. Two questions for Anneli, perhaps. First, on net financials in the quarter. It came down quite a lot from Q3, even though sort of the interest rates didn't change a lot in the quarter and the net debt didn't change a lot in the quarter. So if you could comment on any sort of non-recurring expenses or positive items, either in Q3 or in Q4. And then secondly, you talked about the current tax being higher for several reasons. If possible, could you provide any kind of guidance or comments or elaborate on what should be sort of the normalized tax rates going forward? Thanks.
... Hello, operator?
I can, I can still hear you, but I didn't hear any answer. Did you hear my question?
I have nothing. He should ring, I think.
Anders, can you please reply on Fredrik Stensved's question? We seem to have a little problem with the technology. We'll be right back with the presentation.
Sorry, everyone, we had a technical glitch here, but now we're back online. So please go ahead with questions. Thanks.
Fredrik Stensved, ABG Sundal Collier, your line is now unmuted. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Do you hear me?
Yes, we do.
Yes, we do.
Yeah.
Perfect. Perfect. So, unless, unless you didn't hear me last time, two questions. First, on net financial expenses in the quarter, which came down quite a lot in Q4 compared to Q3, even though the average interest rates didn't change much, and the net debt didn't change much. So if there are any sort of non-recurring items in either directions, in either Q3 or Q4, that would be interesting to know. And then secondly, Anneli, you talked about the current taxes being higher in this quarter and this year due to several different reasons. But if you could provide any sort of comments or guidance on what the normalized tax rate would be going forward, that would be much appreciated. Thanks.
Okay, thank you, Lia. I'll start with the financing question. I'll, I feel like I have my own job as CFO still. When it comes to financial expenses, you should look at Q4 being the source of the average going forward. In Q3, we had some extraordinary refinancing costs, so Q4 is more in line with the expectations going forward.
Yes, and the tax issue, I'm not surprised that you asked the question. I mean, firstly, of all, the efficient tax in Pandox is a bit higher now because we have the most part of our business outside Sweden. And as you know, U.K. has raised the tax for companies from 19%- 25%. So of course, that is part of the effect, but we are, for the coming year, of course, working on this. But as always, in property-owning companies, it takes some time to sort of restructure the company in a better shape, but we are on the issue. So the...
I can sort of promise that the tax will not be higher next year than it is this year, but it's hard to give a guidance, specifically lower than if you look at the total tax during for the full year.
To the year-to-date.
Yeah. Yep. For year-to-date, but not in the quarter. But because the quarter was, of course, sort of an effect of getting the full year together. So if you look at the full year percentage on actual tax, it will be a bit lower than that.
Okay, perfect. That's, that's helpful. Then, another question. Liia, you mentioned that you expect RevPAR to grow in 2024, driven by the events in Germany. We have the European Championship. Can you comment on what you expect in terms of RevPAR growth in, say, the Nordics? Is that expected to grow as well, or is the total RevPAR growth only coming from a pickup in Germany and Brussels?
We do expect RevPAR growth in all our markets. Of course, especially when it comes to the lagging markets, where you have international traffic coming back in full 2024. You have business travel increasing all over our destinations.
And you, of course, have Helsinki coming from low levels, you have capacity being sort of absorbed in more. So we do expect RevPAR growth in all our markets, but there would be probably more on the markets where you still have some occupancy gaps to fill.
Perfect. Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Albin Sandberg from Kepler Cheuvreux. Please go ahead.
Yes, hi there. So, question on, let's say the 2024 outlook. I know back in the good old days, you used to also tie back the outlook to your cash earnings. You're talking about the RevPAR, but should one understand it so that if RevPAR grows, then your underlying cash earnings should grow as well?
Absolutely. And of course, we have had 2023 with a very high increase in interest rates. And then on top of that, the tax reduction rules that Anneli talked about. So that in all the sense, we do expect good cash earnings growth.
Yeah. Good, thanks. Also a follow-up as my side on the tax side, I got it right. If I take the paid tax over your, let's say, income from property management, I get around 21%. Did you say that you would see a lower tax rate than that going forward, or were you talking-
Yes.
-absolute terms?
Yes, a bit lower than this year.
Yep. Yep, perfect. Great. And then also, I mean, obviously, it's been very topical now, and things are moving very fast on the interest rate side and so on. But you're commenting on the specifically, again, on the refinancing and so on. And I think you showed already last year that you did, you know, quite well, and you were able to refinance. Looking at Pandox a few years out and so on, do you plan for any specific changes in your, let's say, credit maturities or so on? Or is this the kind of refinancing that we should expect every year? And in that case, would you continue to so specifically comment on that outlook?
I think we are—we like to come back to where it used to be. I mean, we—I don't see us having bond financing, even though now the bond financing is easing up for others. So I think the banks have a better opportunity to also come into more refinancing for us as well as others. But when it comes to maturities, our sweet spot has always been around three, four years. I think we will gradually, when we refinance our term loans, our loans, then we are basically aiming for three to four years, which is a bit still like a sweet spot for having, getting the best credit margins.
Great. And two more questions for me. Specifically on the numbers, the central costs, they were a positive surprise to me. Is that a good steady state level that we saw in 2023, or any specific to highlight there in the quarter?
No, it's sort of a basic level, I would say.
Yeah, great. And then my final question, Liia, you pointed out the fact that new supply might be a bit lower now in the years to come and so on.
Yeah.
You mentioned a loan to value well within your target range. What's your own view of becoming a bit more aggressive, let's say, in growth initiatives going forward, or are we too early to talk about that?
No, we love to see new acquisitions and new opportunities coming in. 2023 was a year where there was 60% less transactions made than before the pandemic. The year before, it was 30%. So the last two years have been poor when it comes to transactions. 2023 was a record low. But we do see things loosening up, and especially with sort of other parties and all parties getting a better financing position. So, we are sneaking around for opportunities, and I'm hopeful to see more coming up.
Okay, great. Thank you. That's all my questions.
The next question comes from Fredric Cyon from Carnegie. Please go ahead.
Good morning, Liia, Anneli, and Anders. Yeah, most of my questions has been answered already, but unfortunately, we have to go back to taxes. So, I don't think misinterpret your answer. Are you expecting the absolute amount of current paid tax to be lower, or were you referring to the tax rate being lower going forward?
The tax rate, the tax rate.
Not necessarily the absolute amount of paid tax versus 2023.
No.
That was rather elevated.
No, if you look at the tax rate, and as I explained, we are in a bit higher tax position since they actually raised the taxes in U.K., where we are performing well. So if you look at the percentage of the tax, the tax rate. Then again, when you see that interest rates will be coming down, then of course, this will also take down the tax rate because then you can deduct more. Yeah. And so the tax law legislation hasn't really caught up with the interest rates. No, it was, I mean, it was one catch up with the interest rates. In a lower interest rates environment than it is today.
So, I mean, a lot of property-owning companies have that issue for the moment, because, I mean, you can only deduct the part of the EBITDA level that—I think it's basically 30% of the EBITDA level that's allowed to sort of that deductible part of the interest rate, so.
Yeah. Then moving over to the interest rates. I think you guided towards flat levels, Q-on-Q for the first quarter. Given that you don't have as much refinancing to take care of this year as last year, and that you're referring to credit margins being stable. Should we expect the interest rate, all else being equal, topping up at this level?
Yeah, I think credit margins are hopefully sort of balancing out and hopefully also coming down at some point in time, because now, again, we see this sort of bond financing market being more stable. The banks haven't had to sort of cover up for this, meaning that they also need to sort of start competing on the existing refinancings. So we see that the credit margins have hopefully peaked out, peaked out, and then there is the underlying interest rate curves, which have come down. We are, of course, hedged to some extent, but we'll hopefully see lower interest rates, which means that this should be stabilized or at some point slowly coming down.
Thank you. And then my last question relates to the guidance on RevPAR. So I understood that you expect some RevPAR growth across the board, basically-
Yeah.
But perhaps you can give us some flavor on the impact of the European champions to the German market. What kind of RevPAR growth do you expect for the full year in Germany, isolated?
Well, I don't have this number specifically, but if you want to have a hotel in Europe during June, July, you should have booked already because you have the Olympics in Paris, and you have the championship in Germany. And as well, I mean, obviously, there's a crossover flow for all markets. It's 1.5 hours from Brussels to Paris. Somebody said it's the same as you take the train to Nyköping. So, we expect to have full, fully hotels, and of course, prices will correspondingly much higher then.
Thank you. Those were all my questions.
Great.
As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please dial pound key five on your telephone keypad. There are no more questions at this time, so I hand the conference back to the speakers for the next part of the presentation.
I think we have just one more comment when it comes to our incremental income from our existing portfolio. And when we say that we, on 2026, will have +SEK 300 million in net operating income, it's on the 6, 7 projects we made. And of course, we are adding on. These are additional incremental net operating income versus today. And all of these projects are basically today under renovation. Either they have been totally closed or. So there's not so much, we don't expect losing some income, but there's additional income around SEK 130 million this year, and then gradually going up to more than SEK 300 million. This was a question we got on the web, I think.
And with that, I now would like to hand over to our guest speaker, Thomas Emanuel from STR, for the hotel market update. And please remember that Thomas' presentation is totally separate and independent from Pandox, and it's arranged as a service to Pandox stakeholders. So go ahead, Thomas.
Thank you very much, Leah, and good morning to you all. So, as mentioned, I'll do a quick overview of the European hotel performance landscape. If we could advance the slide, please, to the first map. This is showcasing occupancy year-on-year versus 2019. So the good news is, that across the board, as you can see, we have had growth. It was greater in some of those markets that were slower to recover, such as China and Asia. Across EMEA and the Americas, you can see solid single-digit growth, and here in Europe, 8%. So a very respectable year in that respect. If we could advance the slide, please. This showcases what was mentioned previously, is that hotel demand, so that is the number of rooms that were sold across Europe, is now outpacing 2019 levels.
So you can see there, index of 101. Of course, occupancy is not fully recovered due to the new supply that has been opened over that same time period, but the good news for our industry is that we are now selling more rooms than we were. If you could advance the slide, please, to the next map. And this showcases occupancy index, the percentage change, I should say, sorry, the percentage change versus 2019. Couple of regions that are ahead there, Central America, the Middle East, driven, of course, by Saudi and the Emirates, predominantly, but elsewhere, nearly but not quite back. And I think that's generally the situation for occupancy. So we see here in Europe, 4 percentage points behind where we were in 2019. If we can advance the slide, please.
This drills down numbers, occupancy index to 2019 for various countries and regions across the continent, and it's quite amazing how nicely they bucket as such. So the UK and Ireland are doing very well. You can see they're fully recovered. Then we've got Southern Europe, Western Europe, and then those regional outliers, Central and Eastern Europe and Turkey. You see there, Southern Europe, 95%+ recovered, Western Europe, a few percentage points behind. If we advance the slide, please, to look at the gateway cities across the continent, this is occupancy year-on-year, and you can see, with the exception of Istanbul, it was a very strong year for growth across the board. Double-digit increases in terms of occupancy across many countries and does underline the strong year and strong recovery. If we could advance to the next slide, please.
This is the same map, but it's the percentage change from 2019. So, as mentioned, on a country level, you can see that filters down to a city level as well. Generally speaking, the further east you go, the further away from 2019 levels you are. A few recoveries there. Edinburgh has done well. Vilnius, Warsaw, we see that as an impact of demand from the conflict in Ukraine, predominantly, but most of the markets, as you can see there, nearly but not quite recovered. If we can move forward, please, to the next slide. You'll see here that same slide as we saw previously, but for average rates, the percentage change to 2022. So globally, again, we've got some good growth across most regions. Interestingly, the two regions that are actually recovered from an occupancy perspective have seen a slight softening in average rates.
But in Europe, well, 8% occupancy levels up and 9% average rate up. So again, a very good solid year of growth. And if we advance to the next slide, you'll see what was mentioned earlier, once again, that across the world, we are seeing significantly higher average rates than we were in 2019. You can see they're double digits everywhere, but China and in Europe, they're 26%, so significantly ahead. If you could advance the slide, please. Of course, we do live in a high inflationary world and a high inflationary environment. Obviously, those inflation rates have come down somewhat, but they were higher.
The data that STR presents is nominal, but if we take out the impact of inflation there, and you look at the real ADR index, you can see it is still above 2019 levels. So we are looking at real growth, not just inflationary growth, which of course, is an underlying good news story for our industry. If we can move forward, please, we will again see on a country level the average rates indexed on 2019, and there is quite some variety here. You've got outliers in Turkey with currency devaluation. A lot of the markets that had a lot of U.S. visitation, particularly in the summer last year, we'll see that in a slide in a moment. Strong growth. The rest of Europe, a little bit further behind, but nevertheless, we're still looking at double-digit growth across all markets.
If we advance the slide, please, to see those cities. So this is year-on-year. Sorry, this is the percentage change from 2019. My apologies. Percentage change from 2019. Average rates, we've only got two outliers, Helsinki, Tallinn, Russian visitation, Asian visitation impacting there. Elsewhere, significant growth across the board, double digits in most markets. You see there, Paris, Rome, Budapest, all north of 50% growth, which is really quite significant, of course. If we advance the slide, please. This is our year-on-year percentage change chart. So apologies for that. But again, it showcases 2023 being a strong year, good underlying rate growth across the board.
If we can move forward to the next slide, I think this is good to just look at things from a class perspective to show that actually year-on-year, across Europe, across all classes, we saw very decent and pretty consistent growth rates, fairly evenly split between occupancy and average rate as well. The one outlier there, economy class hotels, had more rate growth, very minimal occupancy growth, but that class had come back a little bit more quickly than those other classes. Overall, as you can see, solid double-digit growth across all classes of hotels in Europe last year. If we can advance to the next slide, please. This shows RevPAR indexed to 2019 for all classes of hotels.
Slightly stronger at the lower end and the upper end, so luxury and economy, but you can see across the board, all of those classes with very solid double-digit RevPAR growth across the board. Moving forward, please, to the next slide. I think it's always interesting to just compare Europe to other key markets and certainly those that generally perform in a relatively similar way. So this is the U.S. versus the Eurozone and its RevPAR, and you can see there, indexed on 2019 throughout 2023, that growth was higher here in Europe. Obviously, predominantly driven by average rates, but the European hotel industry has recovered more quickly and more aggressively than the American hotel industry. And if we move forward to the next slide, I've just added the GCC in here as well for some additional comparison.
But if we look at 2023, we can see just how good a year it was... for Europe, and if you look at those summer months, again, that summer leisure demand, a lot of it from the U.S., but a lot of other source markets as well, really was strong, and that's really helped to drive performance. Then obviously, as we've come back into Q4 as well, we've seen the return of more and more corporate demand, so underlying pretty good. If we could advance, please, to the next slide. This is business on the books as of the 22nd of January, so the next 90 days, versus the same time last year. So the good news is the majority, the vast majority of markets have stronger business on the books, so we do expect to see occupancy continue to grow.
If we can move forward, I've just got a few slides to finish off on Germany. Obviously, that's an important market. This is Germany as a whole on a rolling seven-day occupancy basis, 2019, 2022, and 2023. So unsurprisingly, 2023 still not quite back to 2019 levels, but for most of the year ahead of 2022, and you can see there, it is closing the gap on 2019, particularly more and more as we get to the middle and end of the year. So the trajectory is certainly a positive one. If we could advance the slide, please, we see the same chart, but this time for average daily rates. And it's no surprise to see, of course, 2023 significantly ahead of 2019 and year on year ahead for the vast majority of the year as well.
So German rates moving in the right direction. If we can move forward to look now at the various German markets, we've got occupancy for 19, 2022, and 2023. And we can see those at the top end are those that have a significant portion of leisure demand as well. We see that Hamburg, Berlin, obviously, they have a very vast and varied demand mix, but then Heidelberg, Freiburg, for example, as well. So leisure continuing to drive quite a bit of demand across those German markets. And if we could advance to have a look at average rates, well, there's quite a regional variance. You would expect that. Obviously, Germany is a vast country. At the top end, unsurprising, I think Munich, EUR 131 average rate for the year of 2023, and Hamburg at EUR 130.
Note as well, the Baltic coastline doing pretty well, boosted by a number of very high-end resorts. If we move forward then to look at business on the books, this is, again, 22nd of January for the next 90 days. You see most of the markets there ahead of 2019 levels, so we do expect to see, once again, occupancy growth across these cities. You'll see there, particularly Hamburg and Stuttgart, significantly ahead of where they were in 2023. If we could advance the slide, please.
This has already been touched on, but of course, the German hotel industry is very influenced by the Messen, the big events that come to town, and we can see as of the first of January for the next 365 days, so the full year, business on the books across four key German cities, and you can already see the spikes for these Messen, for these events very clearly. The good news, I think, is that 2024 is really the first year I think that we're going to see a settled and normalized Messe or event calendar since 2019. So that's a positive. And of course, in the middle of the chart there, you can see the Euros are going to be coming to Germany, of course, so that is gonna help driving demand quite significantly for that period.
If we could advance, please, to the final data slide here. As you can see, this is our forecast. This is for an aggregation of the European cities listed at the bottom of this chart. So we are positive. We believe RevPAR will continue to grow year on year across 2024 and into 2025. It's a little bit softer in Q2, because Q2 was a very, very good quarter for the industry in 2023, but we see that bounce back quite significantly in Q3. That's obviously going to be helped by events. Interesting as well as you move a little bit further into the future, you're seeing a bit more growth coming from occupancy than average rates. I think this is unsurprising when you consider how much rate has grown and the fact that we are continuing to see demand return.
Underlying fundamentals for Europe remain very positive. Just as you could advance the last slide, just thank you very much all indeed for your attention.
Thank you very much, Thomas. And thank you all for participating in this call. I really appreciate your time and interest in Pandox, and your patience also due to the technical glitch, which was completely my fault, I have to admit. The next event is the annual general meeting, 10th of April, and we will publish our Q1 report on the 25th of April, which happens to be my birthday as well. Thank you for your interest, and we wish you a nice continuation of 2024. Goodbye.