* Warns full recovery may take two or more years
* RevPAR down 17.7 percent in Q3
* Rate of RevPAR decline slowing
* Says "not the time" for disposals
* Shares down 1.8 percent
(Adds CEO, analyst comment, background, shares)
LONDON, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Hotelier Millennium & Copthorne said the worst of the recession may be over as its rate of revenue decline slowed but warned it could take more than two years for trading to recover to the levels seen in 2007.
M&C, which operates 120 hotels across the world, said on Thursday revenue per available room (RevPAR), a key industry measure, dropped by 17.7 percent in the third quarter compared with a fall of 21.3 percent in the second quarter.
That trend continued into October, with RevPAR down by 12.8 percent on last year, M&C said. London saw growth of 0.6 percent during the month, with New York RevPAR falling 17.9 percent and Singapore down 26.5 percent.
"I believe that the industry is moving in the right direction. The rate of decline of our global RevPAR has slowed quarter-on-quarter and this trend has continued into October," said Chairman Kwek Leng Beng.
"While it is too early to predict with accuracy how markets will behave in 2010 we are encouraged by these improving trends which suggest that the worst may be behind us," he added.
The comments provide further evidence of an upturn in consumer confidence.
On Wednesday, retailers
However, M&C's Chief Executive
"I probably would have to agree that it's going to take two or more years because the pricing across the world in this industry has been significantly reset," Hartman said.
Hartman also told reporters on a conference call that the group had no current plans to dispose of assets.
"I don't believe that now is the time to sell anything. There's too much blue water between buyers' and sellers' expectations," he said.
Shares in M&C, which have outperformed the
"The potential for asset disposals has long been the value driver for MLC. However, despite considerable pressure, they sold little in the bull market and so now in a bear market there is even less likelihood," said Seymour Pierce analyst Mark Reed.
For the nine months to Sept. 30, the group reported pretax profit of 52.4 million pounds ($86.31 million), down 41 percent.
M&C said it was comfortable with expectations for the current financial year. The consensus pretax profit forecast currently stands at 72 million pounds, according to a Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S poll of 7 analysts. (Editing by Paul Sandle and Jon Loades-Carter) ($1=.6071 Pound)
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