The squeeze on finance is feeding through to major travel suppliers.
Only this summer, Marriott was complaining of a crisis in human resources as demand for hotel staff outstripped the available workforce. Now it is compelled to warn of reduced investment and cuts at its
The reason is a sharp fall in revenue per available room (revpar). Having reported a 5.6% increase in revpar in the second quarter of the year and 3.4% increase in the third, Marriott forecast a 3% fall in the final three months of the year and flat or falling revenues per room throughout next year.
Elsewhere, Airbus has agreed to pay French aircraft-parts manufacturer Latecoere in advance for work on the A380 superjumbo owing to a "temporary liquidity problem" at the company. In other words, Airbus is injecting cash to keep the parts-maker going. According to an unnamed source: "Nobody can afford to see Latecoere in difficulty." Production of the A380 is already way behind schedule.
Back in the US, Virgin Group is ready to inject an unspecified sum into
In the circumstances, those hoping the
This is the estimate of The Guardian economic expert Will Hutton, not me - and the Treasury is reportedly working on plans for an even bigger rescue.
Given the relative sizes of the