BH
Braemar Hotels & Resorts Inc. (BHR)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered solid operating performance: total hotel revenue was $215.82M, diluted EPS was -$0.04, Comparable Hotel EBITDA was $70.8M, and Hotel EBITDA margin improved to 32.4% vs 32.1% in Q1 2024 .
- Results beat Wall Street consensus: revenue $215.82M vs $207.50M consensus (beat), EPS -$0.04 vs -$0.11 consensus (beat), and EBITDA ~$60.24M vs $57.8M consensus (beat). The company also reported Adjusted EBITDAre of $63.0M (above consensus) .*
- Urban assets were a key driver: comparable RevPAR growth of 11.3% YoY; management cited the presidential inauguration as a tailwind at Capital Hilton and continued strength across urban markets .
- Balance sheet actions lowered cost of capital and addressed 2025 maturities: a $363M refinancing across five hotels (SOFR +2.52%) and extension of Ritz-Carlton Lake Tahoe mortgage (SOFR +3.25%) reduced interest costs and extended weighted average maturities .
- Strategic update: Sofitel Chicago Magnificent Mile converted to a franchise structure, expected to provide immediate uplift in asset value and operational flexibility; quarter capex was $15.3M, and the dividend was maintained at $0.05 per share .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record/highest quarterly RevPAR for the portfolio at $404; second consecutive quarter of RevPAR growth signaling an inflection point .
- Urban portfolio strength: comparable RevPAR up 11.3% YoY; Capital Hilton delivered 19.3% YoY RevPAR growth, aided by inauguration-related demand .
- Margin execution: Comparable Hotel EBITDA rose to $70.8M (+5.3% YoY), with Hotel EBITDA margin up ~34 bps YoY; management emphasized cost containment and productivity improvements across properties .
What Went Wrong
- Sofitel Chicago underperformed: hotel EBITDA fell to -$2.4M and RevPAR declined 6.1% YoY; occupancy dropped to 48.0% .
- Cameo Beverly Hills faced volatility linked to California wildfires: group displacement and daily booking/cancellation swings pressured performance early in the quarter .
- Resorts normalized: while still strong, several resort assets showed mixed YoY performance (e.g., Ritz-Carlton Sarasota RevPAR -10.4% YoY and EBITDA -3.7%), reflecting normalization from post-COVID peaks .
Financial Results
Segment KPIs and profitability
Portfolio KPIs
Vs. Wall Street consensus (Q1 2025)
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “I’m extremely pleased with Braemar’s solid first quarter performance, highlighted by RevPAR growth of 4.2%. This marks our second consecutive quarter of RevPAR growth… our urban hotel portfolio delivered impressive 11.3% RevPAR growth… resorts continued their upward recovery trajectory with nearly 2% RevPAR growth.” – CEO Richard Stockton .
- “Adjusted EBITDAre for the quarter was $63.0 million… approximately 23% of our debt is effectively fixed and approximately 77% is effectively floating… net debt to gross assets was 42.3%.” – CFO Deric Eubanks .
- “We closed on a refinancing involving five hotels… $363 million… SOFR +2.52%… addressed our only remaining final debt maturity for 2025.” – CEO Richard Stockton .
- “Sofitel Chicago… transition to a franchise… expected to provide an immediate uplift in the value of the property… management agreement with Remington being terminable on sale.” – CEO Richard Stockton .
Q&A Highlights
- Group demand resilience despite macro volatility: booking window shortened slightly but conversions strong; Q1 group revenue +31% YoY across 14 of 15 hotels; FY25 pace +7%, FY26 +10% .
- International inbound exposure is minimal (mid-single digits portfolio-wide); muted impact and market-specific (St. Thomas down slightly; Puerto Rico up modestly) .
- Margin outlook optimistic: productivity up 1% YoY; contract labor reduced to ~2% of total labor; wage growth stabilizing; continued EBITDA growth expected via cost containment .
- Sofitel franchise conversion rationale: unencumbered structure improves asset value; minimal capex required (public/meeting spaces planned next year) .
- Preferred redemption mechanics and asset sales: staged by issuance timing with expectations to close 1–2 hotel sales in 2025; proceeds could address 2026 convertible notes .
Estimates Context
- Revenue: $215.82M actual vs $207.50M consensus – bold beat .*
- EPS: -$0.04 actual vs -$0.11 consensus – bold beat .*
- EBITDA: ~$60.24M actual vs $57.8M consensus – bold beat.*
- Implication: Estimates likely need upward revision for urban-driven recovery and portfolio margin resilience; management’s Adjusted EBITDAre ($63.0M) and comparable EBITDA ($70.8M) underscore operating strength .*
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Operating momentum is improving, led by urban markets; current-quarter urban RevPAR +11.3% YoY and portfolio Comparable Hotel EBITDA +5.3% YoY support narrative of an inflection in fundamentals .
- Financing actions de-risk 2025 with lower spreads and extended maturities ($363M refi; Tahoe extension), reducing interest costs and near-term refinancing risk .
- Strategic franchising at Sofitel Chicago should enhance sale optionality and asset valuation; watch for subsequent operating efficiencies under Remington .
- Group business remains a material lever: strong Q1 performance (+31% YoY) and solid forward pace (+7% FY25, +10% FY26) could sustain occupancy/margin gains despite leisure normalization .
- Dividend is intact ($0.05/share) and reiterated for Q2; pairing cash returns with deleveraging (preferred redemptions now ~$90M) strengthens equity case .
- Asset sale pipeline is moving toward execution (buyers touring, LOIs in hand); potential proceeds give flexibility to redeem preferreds, repurchase common (when permitted), and address 2026 converts .
- Near-term trading: stock sensitivity to asset sale catalysts, urban demand prints, and additional refinancing at favorable spreads; medium-term thesis: margin and RevPAR normalization with constrained industry supply and targeted capex driving asset-level ROI .