Host Hotels & Resorts Acquires 1 Hotel Central Park and Completes Acquisition of The Ritz-Carlton O’ahu, Turtle Bay
31 Juillet 2024 - 10:30PM
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. (NASDAQ: HST) (“Host” or the
“Company”), the nation’s largest lodging real estate investment
trust, today announced that it has acquired the fee simple interest
in the 234-room 1 Hotel Central Park (the “Property”) for
approximately $265 million in cash. The acquisition price
represents an 11.1x EBITDA multiple or a cap rate of approximately
8.1% on the Property’s 2024 estimated results1.
The Property is expected to be among Host’s top-10 assets based
on estimated full year 2024 results, with expected RevPAR of $545,
Total RevPAR of $735, and EBITDA per key of over $100,0002, further
improving the quality of the Company’s portfolio.
James F. Risoleo, President and Chief Executive
Officer, said, “We are excited to add the 1 Hotel Central Park to
our portfolio and further diversify Host’s presence in New York
City, one of the top performing RevPAR markets in the country. This
high performing hotel will provide exposure to the luxury guest in
Upper Manhattan, the top RevPAR submarket in the city. This is our
third 1 Hotel acquisition, after Nashville and South Beach, and we
look forward to continuing our strong partnership with the
sustainable luxury brand.”
Risoleo continued, “With meaningful in-place
cash flow, no near-term anticipated capital expenditures, extremely
low expected supply growth, and an irreplaceable location just one
block from Central Park and Fifth Avenue’s luxury shopping
district, we expect the Property to drive additional value creation
for our stockholders.”
Opened in 2015, the LEED Certified® 1 Hotel
Central Park is a sustainable luxury property with 234 keys,
including 25 suites and a recently added 5-key penthouse that
offers large terraces and a presidential suite. The lobby level
features Jams, a three-meal restaurant and bar affiliated with
James Beard award winner Jonathan Waxman. The second floor offers
2,000 square feet of contiguous and flexible meeting space, as well
as a naturally lit fitness center and business center.
Additionally, the Company anticipates closing on
the previously announced acquisition of the fee simple interest in
the 450-room Ritz-Carlton O’ahu, Turtle Bay (the “Resort,”), later
today. The Resort is located on the North Shore of Oahu, Hawaii,
and includes a 49-acre land parcel entitled for development (the
“Land Parcel”). The Company acquired the Resort and Land Parcel for
approximately $680 million, net of key money. The acquisition price
represents a 16.3x EBITDA multiple or a cap rate of approximately
5.3% on the Resort’s 2024 estimated results3. Based on preliminary
2025 forecasts and the conversion to a Ritz-Carlton, the
acquisition price represents an approximate 13.5x EBITDA multiple
or a cap rate of approximately 6.7%4.
Risoleo continued, “In 2024, we have acquired
$1.5 billion of iconic and irreplaceable hotels at a blended 13.6x
EBITDA multiple5. This represents over $100 million in estimated
full-year EBITDA that we believe will grow as the assets we
acquired stabilize. Looking back at the path to $2 billion of
EBITDA we laid out just over a year ago at our investor day, we are
halfway toward our target of $3 billion of acquisitions at a lower
blended EBITDA multiple than assumed. We are extremely proud of the
progress we have made with these diverse acquisitions, and we
remain focused on being opportunistically positioned moving
forward.”
ABOUT HOST HOTELS & RESORTS
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. is an S&P 500 company and is
the largest lodging real estate investment trust and one of the
largest owners of luxury and upper-upscale hotels. The Company
currently owns 76 properties in the United States and five
properties internationally totaling approximately 43,400 rooms. The
Company also holds non-controlling interests in seven domestic and
one international joint ventures.
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
Note: This press release contains forward-looking statements
within the meaning of federal securities regulations. These
forward-looking statements are identified by their use of terms and
phrases such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “could,” “estimate,”
“expect,” “intend,” “may,” “should,” “plan,” “predict,” “project,”
“will,” “continue” and other similar terms and phrases, including
references to assumptions and forecasts of future results.
Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance
and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other
factors which may cause the actual results to differ materially
from those anticipated at the time the forward-looking statements
are made. These risks include, but are not limited to: general
economic uncertainty in the Oahu and New York City markets
and the possibility that future growth in these markets will not
meet current expectations or the stabilized results we expect to
achieve; other factors such as natural disasters and weather that
will affect occupancy rates at the property and the demand for
hotel products and services; the impact of economic and
geopolitical developments on lodging demand and the Oahu and New
York City markets in particular; operating risks associated with
the hotel business; ; risks that hotel supply in these markets will
increase greater than expected or will have a larger impact on
occupancy at the properties than currently forecasted; transition
risks associated with our changing the manager of the The
Ritz-Carlton, O’ahu, Turtle Bay and the risk that the new manager
will not be able to achieve the results we expect them to achieve;
our ability to maintain our properties in a first-class manner,
including meeting capital expenditure requirements; the effects of
hotel renovations on our hotel occupancy and financial results; our
ability to compete effectively in areas such as access, location,
quality of accommodations and room rate structures; risks that the
acquisitions of the properties and any new developments at the
properties may not perform in accordance with our expectations; and
other risks and uncertainties associated with our business
described in the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly
reports on Form 10-Q and current reports on Form 8-K filed with
the SEC. Although the Company believes the expectations
reflected in such forward-looking statements are based upon
reasonable assumptions, it can give no assurance that the
expectations will be attained or that any deviation will not be
material. All information in this release is as of the date of this
release and the Company undertakes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statement to conform the statement to actual
results or changes in the Company’s expectations.
1 |
Consistent
with industry practice, Host calculates the EBITDA multiple as the
ratio of the purchase price to the property’s EBITDA and the
capitalization rate as the ratio of property’s net operating income
to its purchase price. EBITDA and net operating income are non-GAAP
measures. The comparable GAAP metric to EBITDA multiple is the
ratio of the purchase price to net income. The ratio of the
purchase price to 2024 net income is 16x based on expected net
income of $16 million. The comparable GAAP metric to capitalization
rate utilizing 2024 estimated net income is the ratio of net income
to the purchase price which is 6.2%. The difference between
estimated 2024 net income and EBITDA is depreciation expense of $8
million. The difference between EBITDA and net operating income is
$3 million for the annual contractual reserve requirements for
renewal and replacement expenditures for 2024. |
|
|
2 |
The comparable GAAP metric to EBITDA per key is net income per
key, which is $70,000 based on 2024 forecast net income of $16
million. |
|
|
3 |
The ratio of the purchase price to 2024 estimated net income is
29x based on expected net income of $22 million. The comparable
GAAP metric to capitalization rate utilizing 2024 estimated net
income is the ratio of net income to the purchase price which is
3.4%. The difference between estimated 2024 net income and EBITDA
is depreciation expense of $17 million. The difference between
EBITDA and net operating income is $6 million for the annual
contractual reserve requirements for renewal and replacement
expenditures for 2024. The purchase price was calculated net of key
money and the amount allocated to the Land Parcel. |
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4 |
The ratio of the purchase price to estimated 2025 net income is
21x based on expected net income of $29 million. The comparable
GAAP metric to capitalization rate utilizing 2025 estimated net
income is the ratio of net income to the purchase price which is
4.7%. The difference between estimated 2025 net income and EBITDA
is depreciation expense of $17 million. The difference between
EBITDA and net operating income is $4 million for the annual
contractual reserve requirements for renewal and replacement
expenditures for 2025. The purchase price was calculated net of key
money and the amount allocated to the Land Parcel. |
|
|
5 |
For the four hotels acquired in 2024, the ratio of the purchase
price to 2024 net income is 23x based on expected net income of $61
million. The difference between estimated 2024 net income and
EBITDA is depreciation expense of $43 million. |
SOURAV GHOSHChief Financial Officer (240)
744-5267 |
JAIME MARCUSInvestor Relations (240) 744-5117
ir@hosthotels.com |
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