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Stay ahead of the hospitality curve at the Hotel Owner Conference 2026. Our 2026 sessions will tackle the industry's most pressing challenges: Hospitality Investment & Debt, the impact of AI and Personalisation, the roadmap to Net Zero, and Storytelling through Design. Meet the leaders defining the next era of UK hotel ownership.
Julie WhiteCCO, Accor Europe
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David HartCEO, RBH Hospitality
Varun ShettyGM, The Belfry
Christian MastersHotel Manager, art'otel
Julie WhiteCCO, Accor Europe
Suzanne SpeakMD UK&I, Radisson
David HartCEO, RBH Hospitality
Varun ShettyGM, The Belfry
Christian MastersHotel Manager, art'otel
3 November 2026  •  Prince Philip House, London
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Government extends lockdown for ‘at least’ three more weeks
Dominic Raab - UK Parliament official portraits 2017

Government extends lockdown for ‘at least’ three more weeks

In this episode we speak to Anthony Hunt, partner and co-head of Corporate Real Estate at law firm Howard Kennedy. We discuss why 2026 may be seen as a pivotal year for boutique hotels, unpack the rise of global nomadism and how this is shaping demand and trends across hospitality, and how a strong team and clear, consistent messaging and offerings are key to securing investment.

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The government has announced an extension to the coronavirus lockdown for “at least” a further three weeks.

The decision was announced at today’s (16 April) press briefing which was led by foreign secretary Dominic Raab. It also comes after Raab led an emergency Cobra committee and cabinet meetings about the continuation of social distancing measures earlier this morning.

During the briefing, Rabb said any change to the UK’s social distancing measures now would risk a “significant increase in the spread of the virus”, that would threaten a second peak of the virus and substantially increase the number of deaths. “It would undo the progress we have made to date,” he added.

He continued: “Early relaxation would do more damage to the economy over the longer period. I want to be really clear about this, the advice from Sage is that relaxing any of the measures currently in place would do more damage to both public health and our economy.

“Based on this advice, which we have very carefully considered, the government has decided that the current measures must remain in place for the next three weeks.”

He added that the government could subsequently decide to relax the measures in some respects, while strengthening them in others.

The news comes just days after the Office for Budget Responsibility revealed the UK economy could shrink by as much as 35% in the second quarter of 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The watchdog is also predicting a 13% drop in annual GDP as a result of the outbreak, which it said would “comfortably exceed” any of the annual falls around the end of each world war or in the financial crisis.

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