NEW YORK — A wave of deals in the online travel industry has increasingly put some familiar names under two corporate umbrellas: Expedia and Priceline.
For now, industry executives and travel experts say, consumers won't notice much of an impact. They will still have plenty of options for booking flights, hotel rooms and vacation packages, including shopping directly with airline and hotel websites.
Expedia said Thursday that it is buying rival Orbitz Worldwide Inc. for about $1.3 billion. The deal adds the Orbitz brand and sites including CheapTickets and HotelClub to a lineup that already includes names such as Hotels.com, Hotwire, Trivago and Australia's Wotif. com. Expedia is also in the process of buying Travelocity.
In a conference call with analysts, CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said that even though big in the online segment, his company is "only a small player" in a $1.3 trillion travel market that includes giants like Google and many newcomers. Expedia says its booking account for only 4 percent of global travel spending.
The purchase of Orbitz would leap Expedia ahead of The Priceline Group Inc. in travel bookings, although Priceline would still be larger by revenue and stock market value. Besides its namesake website, Priceline owns Booking.com, Kayak and restaurant-reservation site OpenTable. Then there are smaller players such as airfare-search site Hipmunk and last-minute deal site HotelTonight.
Khosrowshahi said he was optimistic that antitrust regulators would approve the deal.
Some analysts agreed. They said consolidation in the online travel industry is in the early stages, and it's an industry with low barriers to new entrants.
"In broad terms, the less players that you have, consumers have less choice ... and obviously less price competition is not good for consumers, but I don't think we're at that point yet," said Tuna Amobi of S&P Capital IQ. "There is still a tremendous amount of alternatives out there to make online travel reservations."