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PEB at $13 With $2.5B in Debt and a $0.04 Dividend. Define "Bargain."

Pebblebrook's 43% run-up has momentum investors calling it cheap, but a negative P/E ratio, $2.5 billion in debt, and a dividend yield of 0.29% tell a more complicated story than any stock screener will surface.

PEB at $13 With $2.5B in Debt and a $0.04 Dividend. Define "Bargain."

PEB trades at $13.62 with a negative P/E ratio somewhere between -10.76 and -14.16, depending on which service you check. The stock is up 43.1% over the trailing twelve months. That's the momentum case. The "bargain" case requires you to ignore the $2.46 billion in debt, the $0.04 annual dividend, and the fact that this company posted a full-year 2025 basic EPS loss of $0.90 on $1.5 billion in revenue.

Let's decompose the analyst picture. Barclays dropped its target to $9.00 with an underweight rating on April 7. Stifel says buy at $14.50. Truist holds at $14.00. Wells Fargo holds at $12.00. The consensus across 14 analysts averages $12.42... which is below the current trading price. When the average target is lower than where the stock sits today, calling it a bargain requires a thesis the street doesn't share. Morningstar's $20 fair value estimate and Simply Wall St's $21.49 DCF are doing heavy lifting for the bull case, but DCF models are only as honest as the growth assumptions baked into them.

The portfolio transformation story is real. PEB shifted resort EBITDA contribution from 17% to 45% since 2019, selling 15 urban properties for $1.2 billion and acquiring five resorts for $802 million. That's a genuine strategic pivot. The question is what it cost. A 0.83 debt-to-equity ratio on a portfolio of 44 hotels (roughly 11,000 keys) means roughly $224K in debt per key. That number needs to be serviced regardless of whether the urban recovery in San Francisco and Seattle materializes at the pace management is modeling.

Q4 2025 delivered a beat... $0.27 EPS against $0.23 consensus, $349 million revenue against $342 million estimates. FY 2026 guidance of $1.50 to $1.62 EPS suggests management expects a swing from negative to solidly positive earnings. If they hit the midpoint, that's a forward P/E around 8.7x at current prices. That would be cheap for a hotel REIT. The word "if" is doing significant work in that sentence.

Insider buying totaling $20.1 million across 10 insiders over the past year is notable (insiders buying is always more informative than insiders selling). But $20.1 million against a $1.5 billion market cap is conviction, not transformation. The real test for PEB isn't whether momentum carries the stock to $15. It's whether the operating portfolio generates enough NOI growth to service $2.46 billion in debt, fund the FF&E reserve, and eventually return meaningful capital to shareholders... all while absorbing new supply pressure in core markets. A $0.04 annual dividend on a REIT tells you management agrees the cash has better uses right now. The question is whether those uses eventually benefit the equity holder or just the debt stack.

Operator's Take

Look... if you're an asset manager or owner watching PEB's stock price and wondering whether the hotel REIT trade is back, slow down. A 43% run-up on a company that lost $0.90 per share last year is a momentum trade, not a value signal. The portfolio restructuring toward resorts is smart strategy, but $224K in debt per key means the margin for error on every property in that portfolio is razor-thin. If you're benchmarking your own asset performance against public REIT comps, use PEB's actual operating metrics... same-property RevPAR, flow-through, GOP margin... not the stock price. Wall Street momentum and hotel operating fundamentals are two completely different conversations, and I've seen too many owners confuse one for the other right before the cycle turns.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: Pebblebrook Hotel Trust
🏢 Barclays 📊 Debt-to-equity ratio in hospitality 🏢 Morningstar 🏢 Simply Wall St 🏢 Stifel 👤 Truist 📊 Urban hotel recovery 🏢 Wells Fargo 📊 Hotel REIT valuation 🏢 Pebblebrook Hotel Trust 📊 Portfolio transformation
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.