* Easing curbs, UK vaccination drive to boost leisure demand
* "Strong bookings" for tourist locations in summer -CEO
* 92% of hotels in main UK market open
* Shares fall more than 3%
(Adds detail from call, analyst)
By Pushkala Aripaka
April 27 (Reuters) - Premier Inn-owner Whitbread
reported a 1 billion pound ($1.39 billion) annual loss on
Tuesday but said it expects a significant bounce in staycation
demand this summer as COVID-19 curbs in Britain are relaxed.
Whitbread, which also owns the Beefeater and Bar + Block
chains, said revenue for the year to March slumped by nearly
three quarters, sending its shares down as much as 3.4% to 3,294
pence.
Britain's hospitality industry has suffered during the
pandemic, with travel and entertainment spending severely
restricted by measures to stop the spread of the virus.
The country's latest lockdown is still being eased in stages
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-britain-factbox-idUSKBN2AM207,
with hotels and cinemas not set to open until May 17 at the
earliest.
Britain's COVID-19 vaccination programme, under which more
than half of Britons so far have been given at least one shot,
would support the return of leisure guests, Chief Executive
Alison Brittain said.
"We will definitely be hiring in the summer for seasonal
work for coastal destinations that are going to be full," she
told journalists. Coastal and other tourist locations make up
about 15% of Whitbread's hotels.
"We have got very strong bookings into ... anything with a
view, frankly."
Brittain also said the company expects to add about 4,000 to
5,000 new rooms in the United Kingdom and Germany over the next
year.
"Whitbread needs its hotels to reach 55% occupancy to break
even and although management is expecting staycations to ramp up
demand in the UK, it may not be enough to push the group over
the line," Hargreaves Lansdown's Laura Hoy said in a note.
Whitbread, which has the bulk of its business in Britain,
said over 92% of its hotels in the country are now open.
Occupancy levels in February were at 29% across all sites.
Its 2020 adjusted pretax loss of 635.1 million pounds was
its first such annual loss since at least 2002, Refinitiv Eikon
data showed. Analysts on average were expecting a loss of 688
million pounds.
Statutory loss stood at 1.01 billion pounds ($1.40 billion),
while sales of 589.4 million pounds missed expectations.
($1 = 0.7201 pounds)
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka in Bengaluru; editing by Kirsten
Donovan, Sayantani Ghosh and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)