Hotel owners are facing significant financial challenges due to high interest rates, rising insurance costs, and other economic pressures. These issues will likely compel many owners to consider selling their properties to repay debt coming due by the end of 2024. A substantial amount of U.S. hotel debt is maturing, and in a high-interest-rate environment, refinancing options may be limited.
According to a recent report by commercial real estate company JLL titled “Impending U.S. Hotel Debt Maturities and Implications for Transactions,” approximately $5.8 billion in U.S. hotel securitized loans will require repayment later this year. Owners will need to either fully repay, refinance, extend, or sell their properties. The current financial climate, characterized by high interest rates and rising insurance costs, makes refinancing particularly challenging, pushing many owners toward transactions.
JLL's report analyzes the financial stress hotel owners are expected to face as their loan maturity dates approach. It also evaluates the most advantageous repayment strategies.
**High Interest Rates**
JLL reports that around 71.4% of the maturing loans are in "critical stress," meaning they cannot generate enough net operating income to meet their debt obligations. Persistently high interest rates are a major contributor to this financial strain.
Since 2020, average fixed interest rates for U.S. hotel securitized loans have risen by 332 basis points, reaching 7.7% in the first quarter of 2024. With the U.S. Federal Reserve maintaining restrictive rates, interest rates are expected to stay elevated, making refinancing an unattractive option for many borrowers.
The high-interest environment has also hindered hotel construction financing, causing developers to delay projects or consider hotel conversions as alternatives to new construction. Additionally, hotel profitability has been lagging, despite a 13.2% increase in U.S. hotel RevPAR in 2023 compared to 2019 levels, driven by strong domestic leisure demand. Markets reliant on international, business, and group travel have seen slower profitability recovery.
In top gateway markets, gross operating profit per available room is about 20% lower than 2019 levels. These markets face high labor costs, increasing property taxes, and other operational expenses, making it difficult for hotel owners to extend loan maturities through refinancing. Rising insurance costs further disrupt cash flows and elevate credit risk.
In 2023, property insurance costs in New Orleans surged by 131% compared to 2021, the highest increase among the top 25 U.S. markets. Other major markets like Miami, Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, and Boston also experienced double-digit increases in insurance costs. These rising expenses directly impact hotels' cash flows, making it harder to meet debt service obligations.
For hotels in "critical stress," refinancing upon loan maturation may not be viable. Instead, owners are expected to pursue transactions as a strong exit strategy, leading to increased hotel transaction volume through the rest of 2024. This presents a "near-term window of opportunity" for hotel investors to capitalize on market dislocation, but this window is expected to close as the number of critically stressed loans decreases from 145 in 2024 to nine by 2028.
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