Lodging REITs: Sector In Demand
[July/August 2007]
By Lynn Novelli
Sept. 11, 2001 cast a long shadow over the lodging
industry, sending the industry’s metrics into a
long downslide. However, after nearly two years
of poor performance, lodging finally started to
come out of the slump in the second half of 2003.
Once under way, the recovery quickly gathered steam,
and by early 2005 lodging REITs were experiencing
growing demand and rising room rates.
Now, six years after the tragic attack, lodging
REITs are definitely healthy again. “After hitting
that trough in 2003, lodging industry fundamentals
have been in an upswing,” says John Arabia, a principal
with Green Street Advisors. “Growing demand and
limited growth in supply have propelled occupancy
levels upwards and allowed hotels to raise room
rates.”
| Lodging
Sector Snapshot* |
| Occupancy
rate |
63.9% |
-1%
from 2006 |
| ADR |
$103.36 |
+5.3%
from 2006 |
| RevPAR |
$66.06 |
+4.2%
from 2006 |
*as of April
30, 2007
Source: Smith Travel Research |
Occupancy, average daily rate (ADR) and revenue per
available room (RevPAR) climbed steadily through 2004,
2005 and 2006. PricewaterhouseCoopers and Smith Travel
Research reported a record-setting 8.0 percent growth
in RevPAR for 2006, the largest increase in 20 years.
Through this period, gains in RevPAR were driven primarily
by room rate increases, creating acceleration in profitability
as well. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, the
lodging industry saw a 25 percent increase in profitability
in 2005, followed by a 21 percent increase in 2006.
Now, midway through 2007, it is clear that the momentum
is continuing, although the pace of growth has slowed.
“The industry continues to move forward, overcoming
the challenges it faced as a result of numerous natural
disasters and human conflicts over the past few years,”
says Michael Fishbin, national director, hospitality
and leisure, Ernst & Young. “Industry fundamentals
remain strong.”
Occupancy Still Strong
The new room supply pipeline is flowing again. Encouraged
by solid profits in 2005 and 2006, strong lodging
fundamentals and interest from capital markets, many
lodging REITs are moving ahead with construction projects
that had been in a holding pattern.
| Lodging |
| # of REITs |
14 |
| Industry Market Cap (in
thousands): |
$31,863,968 |
| % of industry |
8.3% |
| Yield |
4.33% |
| YTD Total Return |
8.86% |
| One-Year Return |
28.26% |
| Three-Year Return |
28.40% |
| Five-Year Return |
16.62% |
| Average Daily Trading Volume
(Shares) |
794,173 |
| Source:
NAREIT data as of May 31, 2007 |
Lodging Econometrics reported
a 1.8 percent supply increase in 2006 and is forecasting
a 2.5 percent increase for 2007. This projected
increase will include approximately 1,087 new hotels
with 116,000 rooms rolling out the welcome mat for
guests this year, a 40 percent increase over 2006.
The total supply pipeline, according to Smith Travel
Research, includes upwards of 3,700 projects with
511,000 rooms.
All of this new supply is putting pressure on occupancy.
“Although occupancy rates are still strong, growth
in this metric is relatively flat and will continue
for the remainder of the year,” Fishbin says.
Even with the expected flurry of new construction,
the good news for hotel owners is that analysts
do not expect supply to exceed demand in the near
future. Smith Travel Research forecasts a 1.9 percent
compound annual growth rate in the number of rooms
through the end of 2008, which should keep pace
with anticipated moderate demand growth.
The surge in supply is moderated to some degree
by escalating construction costs as developers encounter
higher prices for supplies, fuel and labor. “As
a result, mixed use, such as luxury projects combining
hotel and residential, are popular with developers
who are facing costs of as much as $500,000 per
key,” Fishbin says.
New supply varies by geographic market and property
type, with much of the construction activity focused
on mid-scale limited service and luxury properties
in the most desirable markets such as Chicago, New
York City, Orlando, San Diego and Washington, D.C.
“The REITs that will outperform are those that develop
new assets in areas where it is very difficult to
add rooms,” says Jeffrey Donnelly, director of equity
research for Wachovia Capital Markets. “Growth in
supply still breaks down to a few selected properties
in a handful of markets.”
Room Rate Growth
Luxury hotels, which dominate the portfolios of
the larger cap lodging REITs, will continue to exercise
the strongest pricing power in 2007 and will lead
in ADR. While industry-wide ADR growth is expected
to be between 5.8 percent and 6.0 percent, luxury
hotels should enjoy room rate growth in the 8 percent
to 10 percent range, according to Ernst & Young
forecasts.
“High demand for these rooms coupled with their
relative insulation from general economic fluctuations
means that ADR for luxury hotels can continue to
increase at a rate faster than all other market
segments,” says Chris Woronka, vice president and
analyst, Deutsche Bank North America.
Similarly, hotels in key market locations also will
enjoy larger and faster increases in ADR throughout
2007 and into 2008. Manhattan continues to be the
top performer among all major markets, gaining in
occupancy and ADR thanks to strong demand from corporate
travelers and an influx of new, luxury class hotels
with high ADRs.
Although hotel owners as well as investors have
become accustomed to 6 percent to 8 percent gains
in room rates in recent years, these kinds of increases
are a deviation from the norm. Industry statistics
show that prior to Sept. 11, the historical average
growth in ADR was just 3 percent to 4 percent annually.
“As business recovered after Sept. 11, we started
to see rapid growth in room rates, particularly
because competition was low,” Donnelly says. “Now,
at this stage in the recovery, ADR will continue
to grow but at a slower rate.”
| Occupancy
Forecast for 2007 |
|
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
| Occupancy |
63.3% |
59.7% |
59.0% |
59.2% |
61.3% |
63.1% |
63.8% |
63.9% |
| ADR Growth |
5.4% |
-1.5% |
-1.5% |
0.1% |
4.1% |
5.4% |
6.8% |
5.9% |
| RevPAR Growth |
6.1% |
-7.0% |
-2.7% |
0.4% |
7.9% |
8.5% |
8.0% |
5.9% |
| Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers |
Respectable RevPAR Growth
On the heels of 2006’s dramatic 7.6 percent growth,
RevPAR was somewhat sluggish during the first quarter
of 2007, exhibiting modest year-over-year growth
of 4.5 percent, according to Smith Travel Research.
That was still a respectable level for one of the
slower travel seasons of the year, Fishbin notes,
stressing that the rate traditionally picks up through
summer and into the end of the year.
By year’s end, analysts are forecasting 5 percent
to 6 percent growth in RevPAR, tracking with anticipated
ADR expansion. Room rates contributed to 64 percent
of RevPAR in 2005, growing to 69 percent in 2006.
This year, with occupancy rates flattening, ADR’s
contribution to RevPAR will “head north of 80 percent,”
Fishbin forecasts.
At the lower end of RevPAR growth, the economy and
upper-upscale segments are expected to finally exceed
their pre-2001 RevPAR levels. Ernst and Young forecasts
5.3 percent and 5.5 percent RevPAR growth for these
segments, respectively.
Fishbin summarizes the lodging outlook optimistically.
“The industry’s sensitivity to the healthy business
environment, increasing business travel and marginal
supply growth in 2006 are anticipated to yield a
solid position for RevPAR in 2007, albeit below
the gains of 2006.”
Lynn Novelli, a freelance writer from Ohio, is
a frequent contributor to Portfolio.
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