The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority on Tuesday, released the statistics for the city in October that show about half the number of visitors it had a year ago, but 9 percent more than it had in September.
The government agency reported continued slumps in most significant tourism indicators for the month, the eighth straight month of declines; however, since April, the decline percentages have gradually improved with visitation down 97 percent in April, but off 49.4 percent in October.
Experts have yet to speculate how November numbers will fare with Gov. Steve Sisolak ordering a maximum capacity of 25 percent of fire code capacity in resorts on Tuesday from 50 percent.
December also looks bleak after the city’s biggest special event of the year — the 10-day National Finals Rodeo — relocated in 2020 to Arlington, Texas. Sponsors say the rodeo will return in 2021.
“With continued hotel reopenings at the end of September and early October, the room tally of open properties in October represented 140,658 rooms,” said Kevin Bagger, the LVCVA’s director of research. “Total occupancy was 46.9 percent for the month as weekend occupancy reached 64.2 percent and midweek occupancy reached 38.6 percent.”
A gaming industry analyst with New York-based J.P. Morgan said the lack of conventions and the low fly-in market resulting from people reluctant to travel on planes continues to hamper the Las Vegas market.
Joe Greff, in a note to investors, said the drive market improved in October.
“October average daily auto traffic actually increased 3.6 percent year over year on all major highways and was up 7.3 percent year over year on Interstate 15 at the Nevada-California border,” Greff told investors. “On the other hand, total air passengers remain pressured, decreasing 59 percent year over year to 1.98 million passengers, relatively unchanged sequentially.”
The average daily room rate also fell from September and from October 2019. The LVCVA reported the rate at $104.54 — $111.54 on the Strip and $68.21 in downtown Las Vegas. The rate was off 3.3 percent from September but 22.8 percent from a year ago.
Visitor volume for the first 10 months of 2020 — and every other category — is down dramatically from the previous year. Through October, 16.3 million have visited the city compared with 35.5 million for 10 months in 2019, a 54.2 percent decline.
Convention attendance is off 69.6 percent with 1.7 million attending shows in January, February and March. In 2019, the 10-month total was 5.7 million en route to a record 6.6 million total for the year.
With occupancy at 43.6 percent, down 45.7 percentage points for the first 10 months, the average daily room rate is only down 6.7 percent to $124.26 a night over 10 months.
Visitor volume improved slightly in October with a 0.5 percent increase to 110,900 from September. But compared with October 2019, volume is down 24.9 percent.