Hotel Online  Special Report

The Global Approach To Hotel Valuations

CANADIAN LODGING OUTLOOK
March 2002 Year to date


The Canadian Lodging Outlook is a joint monthly publication 
of Smith Travel Research and HVS International, 
Vancouver and Toronto, Canada

 
By: Stephen Rushmore - MAI, CHA, CRE, president and founder of HVS International, a global hotel consulting firm.

Valuing a hotel is both an art and a science. The science involves using mathematical formulae to reflect the value calculations of typical hotel investors.

The art is composed of the various input assumptions that feed the formulae and produce the value. The entire valuation process is intended to mirror the results obtained when a hotel buyer and seller agree on the final price and a transaction occurs.

The evolution of hotel valuation methodology throughout the world started with a simplistic cost approach, whereby the appraiser totaled the hotel's current development cost and then made deductions for depreciation and obsolescence.

Because this method failed to recognize the economics of the property itself or the surrounding market, its applicability in today's financially oriented environment significantly reduces its reliability. The sales comparison approach, through which comparable sales form the basis for the value estimate, generally produces unsatisfactory results for unique and dissimilar properties such as hotels.

The income approach is rapidly becoming the preferred hotel valuation method throughout the world. U.S. hotel investors adopted the income approach methodology during the 1950s. European hoteliers began using it in the early 1990s.

With the recent realization that hotels are not always worth the money invested during their development, Asian hotel owners have now begun to shift their valuation technique from the cost approach to the income approach. Its basis is purely economic, reflecting the art and science of both hotel buyers and sellers. In its simplest form, the income approach takes a hotel's anticipated net income and divides that number by a capitalization rate. The projected net
income reflects the future economic benefit of owning the hotel and the capitalization represents the investor's desired rate of return.

Example: If a hotel is expected to produce a stabilized profit of $1,000,000, and an investor desires a 12% return on his invested capital, then the purchase price has to be:

$1,000,000 divided by .12 = $8,333,333

The proof is demonstrated by taking the purchase price of $8,333,333 and multiplying it by the 12% desired rate of return and showing that the required stabilized profit would have to be $1,000,000.

The key to an accurate estimate of value is a proper profit projection and a supportable capitalization rate.  

Determining Capitalization Rates 

Hotel capitalization rates are intended to reflect the rate of return on invested capital demanded by the entities financing the hotel's acquisition. The desired rate of return reflects various factors such as perceived risk, liquidity, inflation, etc.

Because most hotels are financed by several entities, usually a debt lender and an equity investor, the capitalization rate is actually a weighted average of the desired rates of return.

Example: The hotel described above is going to be purchased by an investor who plans on financing the purchase price with mortgage debt representing 65% of the price and equity accounting for the remaining 35%. The mortgage lender wants to charge 10% interest on a 25 year loan and the equity investor is looking for a 14% return on his invested equity.

The calculation of the weighted cost of capital (capitalization rate) is as follows:
 

Investors
% of Purchase Price
 
Rate of Return
 
Weighted Average
Mortg. Debt  65%  (X)  0.11  (=)  0.07
Equity  35%  (X)  0.14  (=)  0.05
Cap Rate 0.12

Dividing the $1,000,000 stabilized profit by the 12% capitalization rate produces the following value:

$1,000,000 divided by .12 = $8,333,333

The valuation methodology can be proven by showing that the purchase price allocation between the two sources of invested capital matches the annual rate of return requirements and the available stabilized profit.
 

Investors
%
Invested Capital
 
Rate of Return
  Annual Return
Mortg. Debt  65%  $5,416,666 (X) 0.11 (=) $596,000
Equity  35%  $2,916,667  (X)  0.14 (=) $404,000
Cap Rate $8,333,333  $1,000,000

As the hotel industry globalizes, investors are using more sophisticated hotel valuation techniques to reflect the economic characteristics inherent in hotel ownership and transaction structuring. The income approach is rapidly becoming the industry standard throughout the world.


###

Contact:
Kimberley Tyls
HVS International 
4235 Prospect Road
North Vancouver, BC V7N 3L6
(604) 988-9743, ext. 21
[email protected]
www.hvsinternational.com

Also See Hotel Insurance Premiums on the Rise? / Canadian Lodging Outlook / May 2002 
Hotel Development Cost Can Determine Feasibility / Canadian Lodging Outlook / May 2002 
Hotel Internet Distribution Channels / January 2002 Month-to-Date Results / Canadian Lodging Outlook / April 2002 
2001 Was a Great Year If You Were in Edmonton! / December 2001 Year-to-Date Results / Canadian Lodging Outlook / Feb 2002 
2001 Canadian Hotel Sales / Canadian Lodging Outlook / Jan 2002 
The Effect on Capitalization Rates and Discount Factors After September 11 / Canadian Lodging Outlook / Dec 2001 
So How Bad Was September for Canadian Hotels.. Pretty Bad! / Nov 2001
So How Bad Was September for Canadian Hotels.. Pretty Bad! / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / September 2001 
Have Hotel Values in Canada Declined Since September 11th? You Bet They Have / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / August 2001 
The Popularity of Boutique Hotels / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / July 2001 
Rising Energy Costs Cause Concern in the Lodging Industry / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / June 2001 
Niagara Falls: With Supply Comes Demand / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / May 2001 
Does Supply Generate Demand? / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / May 2001 
Optimism With a Hint of Caution, As Analysts Predict a Softer Year for the Canadian Hotel Industry / Mar 2001 
Limited-Service Growth in Canada - Where�s it Going? / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / January 2001 
HVS Canada in Review - Year End 2000 / The Canadian Lodging Outlook / March 2001 
Canadian Lodging Outlook / May 2000 Year to Date Statistics / HVS International - Canada / July 2000 
The Rule of Thumb Method...Does It Still Hold Weight? / Elaine Sahlins - HVS / Oct 2000
What�s Hot and What�s Not in Western Canadian Hotel Markets / Mar 2000


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