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Navigating The Inevitable Reset – By Bryan Younge

A man holding a compass

The world is not short on capital. It is short on conviction.

This article originally appeared on Horwath HTL.

The hospitality industry, particularly in the United States, is at an inflection point. Economic indicators are flashing caution, sentiment is softening, and the easy growth of the past few years is giving way to a more sobering reality. At Horwath HTL, we believe this environment is not one to fear – but one to understand and strategically engage with. 

For the hospitality sector, these crosswinds are real. But so is the opportunity.

While many in the market are debating the signs, the implications are increasingly clear. Even Goldman Sachs – the standard-bearer for Wall Street foresight – has wavered in its outlook, raising the probability of a U.S. recession to 35% in late March. Their rationale? Slowing growth, weakening household and business confidence, and a policy climate more tolerant of economic discomfort.

Cooling, Not Crashing

According to CoStar, U.S. hotels are experiencing a meaningful deceleration:

In other words: the industry is softening, but not collapsing. The fundamentals remain sound. What we’re witnessing is not distress—it’s dislocation.

Capital Market Conditions Are Shifting

While operational indicators are mixed, capital market dynamics are starting to open doors for institutional and private investors:

Global Turbulence Is a Local Opportunity

Goldman Sachs’ public uncertainty is a reminder: even the best minds are struggling to time the turn. For hospitality investors, however, timing perfection isn’t necessary. What’s essential is understanding the cycle and being positioned before the competition re-engages.

The return of inbound international travel remains uneven. Coastal markets like Los Angeles and New York are still operating below 2019 visitation levels. Yet outbound travel is surging—suggesting pent-up demand exists, but isn’t yet directed toward domestic leisure. That pendulum will swing back.

And when it does, hotels with the right fundamentals—location, operational efficiency, strong brand alignment—will benefit from a reawakened demand curve.

What We’re Seeing Among Our Clients

Across our advisory work, Horwath HTL is observing a clear pattern: well-capitalized investors and ownership groups are beginning to reengage—but with a more selective, strategic lens.

We are actively helping clients evaluate assets under pressure, both from an operational and capital structure standpoint. In many cases, the current climate has triggered renewed focus on asset management, margin preservation, and, in select instances, preparing assets for sale where long-term hold strategies no longer align with ownership objectives.

We’re also supporting clients who are using this period to assess market entry—particularly into urban full-service, select-service portfolios, or resort repositioning opportunities. These conversations are being driven not by distress, but by the recognition that price discovery is beginning, and waiting for consensus often means paying a premium.

It’s a moment where smart capital isn’t chasing growth—it’s identifying underpriced stability, and taking a disciplined, forward-looking view.

Bryan Younge – Managing Partner at Horwath HTL. Connect with Bryan on LinkedIn.

Posted by on April 29, 2025.

Categories: Features

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