How Hotel Sales Performed in Q3

Long term opportunistic investors that bet big, at the right basis, and early in the cycle will likely reap tremendous financial rewards.

Today’s global travel sector, which many characterize as being “on the brink of collapse,” is simply unprecedented.  Seven months into a 100-year worldwide pandemic which caused a swift, wide, and deep economic recession has decimated key travel and leisure related industries including airlines, car rentals, cruise lines, ridesharing, and tour operators.  While stock markets have rebounded to near record levels, the US lodging industry continues to experience crippling stress as travel demand, which has experienced a sharp and sustained decline, continues to significantly lag pre-pandemic levels.  Although most segments of lodging demand came to an abrupt halt during the COVID-19 crisis, hotels located in urban markets, particularly group and meeting/convention-oriented properties, have been most negatively impacted and will likely take the longest period to recover.

The LW Hospitality Advisors (LWHA) Q3 2020 Major U.S. Hotel Sales Survey includes 12 single asset sale transactions over $10 million, none of which are part of a portfolio. These transactions totaled $829 million and included approximately 2,700 hotel rooms with an average sale price per room of $306,000. By comparison, the LWHA Q3 2019 Major U.S. Hotel Sales Survey identified 40 transactions totaling roughly $3.725 billion including 13,100 hotel rooms with an average sale price per room of nearly $283,000.  Comparing Q3 2020 with Q3 2019, the number of trades decreased by approximately 70 percent while total dollar volume declined roughly 78 percent and sales price per room increased by roughly 8 percent. 

Noteworthy observations include:

The Q3 2020 Major U.S. Hotel Sales include:

Human behavioral and consumer patterns have changed as many are not eager to enter closed environments with recirculated air, and no owner or hotel company has a playbook for what has been and looks like will continue to be a prolonged near shutdown of travel.

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic earlier this year has resulted in a reset in hotel property values. Many market participants are struggling to determine an applicable discount to pre-COVID levels. Q3 2020 was the second consecutive quarter during which U.S. hotel market transaction activity remained anemic with a relatively wide bid ask spread. Sellers have expressed willingness to consider a 10 to 15 percent discount to pre-COVID pricing while buyers are interested in transacting at a 20 to 40 percent reduction to pre-COVID values.  Price discovery will only be clarified once an active hotel transaction market reemerges.

Although the near-term travel market appears bleak, the hotel investment market has seen a surge of interest from a broad array of sophisticated institutional and high net worth sponsors who are familiar with the sector and know how to assess risk(s) associated with capitalizing lodging assets.  Pre-COVID hotel investor returns generally reached new lows as asset prices were relatively high.  Today, with mounting operational losses, especially for larger, full-service assets, and the continued requirement to service debt(s), pressure is intensifying on owners to capitulate to realistic property values, which will ultimately enhance returns on lodging investments for buyers in the market today.

Long term opportunistic investors that bet big, at the right basis, and early in the cycle will likely reap tremendous financial rewards, particularly contrarian sponsors who acquire large urban corporate and group meeting/convention hotels at fractions of replacement cost.  I believe it fair to say that in the not too distant future, well capitalized opportunistic participants in the U.S. hotel industry will generate outsized returns by acquiring and investing in loans, assets, and operating companies at historically low prices.

Daniel H. Lesser is president and CEO of LW Hospitality Advisors.