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Summit's CFO Walks. The CEO Who Used to Be CFO Steps Back In. That's Not a Plan.

Summit Hotel Properties loses its finance chief while carrying a net loss that doubled year-over-year and a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.69. The CEO stepping in as interim CFO has done the job before, but the question is whether one person can run both sides of a $684M REIT while the capital recycling strategy needs a dedicated finance hand at the wheel.

Summit's CFO Walks. The CEO Who Used to Be CFO Steps Back In. That's Not a Plan.

Summit Hotel Properties (NYSE: INN) just lost its CFO, and the separation terms tell you more than the press release does. Trey Conkling departs June 15 with a $25,000-per-month consulting arrangement through September 30 and a noncompete shortened from twelve months to six. Unvested equity forfeited. That's a clean break with a short leash on both sides.

The "personal reasons" framing is standard. I'm not going to speculate on what's personal. What I will do is look at the financial context this departure lands in. Q1 2026: net loss of $10.4 million, more than double the $4.7 million loss in Q1 2025. Total revenues essentially flat at $185.1 million. AFFO down to $0.21 per diluted share from $0.22. Full-year guidance projects RevPAR growth of 0-3% and AFFO per share of $0.73 to $0.85. The stock trades near $6.31 with a market cap of roughly $684 million. Debt-to-equity sits at 1.69. Financial strength scores a 3 out of 10. BofA downgraded to Underperform with a $4.50 target. That's the environment in which the person running your balance sheet just left.

CEO Jonathan Stanner assumes the principal financial officer role without additional compensation. He held the CFO title at Summit from 2018 to 2021 before becoming CEO, and he was CFO at another hotel REIT before that. So this isn't a CEO fumbling through financial statements he doesn't understand. He knows the mechanics. The issue isn't competence. The issue is bandwidth. Summit is running a capital recycling strategy (targeting 15% of portfolio value into Sunbelt markets by year-end 2026), pursuing a deleveraging target of 4.8x net debt-to-EBITDA from 5.2x, adding 5-7 lifestyle select-service hotels annually, and managing 94 properties across 24 states. That is a full-time CEO job and a full-time CFO job. One person doing both means something gets less attention. The question is what.

I've seen this structure before at a mid-cap REIT going through a portfolio repositioning. The CEO covered the CFO seat for five months while a search ran. What happened wasn't a blowup. It was slower. Investor calls got shorter. Disposition timing slipped because the person approving the models was also preparing the board deck. The search took longer than anyone expected because candidates looked at the portfolio, looked at the leverage, and wanted to see Q3 numbers before committing. By the time they hired, the window for two planned dispositions had closed. That's the risk here. Not catastrophe. Drift.

The share repurchase activity belongs in this picture. Summit bought back 1.4 million shares for $6.0 million in Q1 (roughly $4.29 per share). Insider selling over the past twelve months totaled $172,200 with zero insider purchases. When a company is buying its own stock while individual insiders are net sellers, that's not necessarily contradictory, but you should reconcile it. The company believes the stock is undervalued. The people inside the company are reducing their personal exposure. Both of those things can be true simultaneously. If you're an investor, you should at least ask which signal you're weighting.

Operator's Take

If you're an asset manager or investor with Summit exposure, this is a monitoring event, not a panic event. Stanner knows the finance role. But here's what I'd be watching: disposition execution timing over the next two quarters. The capital recycling strategy is the thesis for this stock, and it requires a CFO who is grinding on deal models, not a CEO who's also doing that between board calls and brand meetings. Pull up the deleveraging target (4.8x net debt-to-EBITDA by mid-2026) and track it quarterly. If that number stalls or moves the wrong direction while the search drags, that tells you the dual-hat structure is costing real execution speed. And if you own or manage a property in their portfolio, pay attention to whether CapEx approvals slow down. That's usually the first thing that gets deprioritized when leadership bandwidth shrinks.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: Summit Hotel Properties
📊 AFFO per share 🏢 Bank of America 📊 Capital recycling strategy 📊 deleveraging 📊 RevPAR Growth 🌍 Sun Belt 👤 Jonathan Stanner 🏢 Summit Hotel Properties 👤 Trey Conkling
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.