Park Hotels Lost $277M Last Year and Guided Positive for 2026. Check the Math.
Park Hotels & Resorts posted a $277 million net loss in 2025, spent $300 million on renovations, and is now guiding for $69-99 million in net income this year. The gap between those numbers tells a story about capital recycling that every REIT investor should decompose before buying the narrative.
Park Hotels & Resorts carried $3.8 billion in net debt into 2026 with a 124.7% debt-to-equity ratio, a $1.28 billion CMBS loan maturing this year on the Hilton Hawaiian Village, and guided RevPAR growth of 0-2%. The stock yields roughly 9%. That yield is doing a lot of heavy lifting for a company whose 2025 net loss was driven by $318 million in impairment charges on "non-core" assets it's trying to exit. The question isn't whether Park is a growth stock or a value stock. The question is whether the capital recycling math actually closes.
Let's decompose the strategy. Park sold six non-core hotels in 2025 for $132 million and targets $300-400 million in total non-core dispositions. That capital funds $230-260 million in projected 2026 CapEx, mostly flowing into core assets like the Hilton Hawaiian Village and Royal Palm Miami. The thesis is straightforward: sell low-margin hotels, reinvest into high-margin ones, let renovated RevPAR carry the portfolio forward. I've audited this exact structure at three different REITs. It works when the renovated assets deliver on projected RevPAR lifts within the modeled timeline. It fails when renovation disruption runs long, when the market softens before the asset stabilizes, or when the debt stack demands refinancing at higher rates before the NOI improvement materializes. Park has exposure to all three risks simultaneously.
The Adjusted FFO guidance of $1.73-$1.89 per share for 2026 is the number management wants you to focus on. Fine. But Adjusted FFO excludes impairment charges, and those impairments weren't accounting fiction. They represent real value destruction in the non-core portfolio... assets that Park acquired or inherited at higher basis and is now exiting at a loss. When you strip $318 million in impairments out of your headline metric, you're asking investors to ignore the cost of the strategy while celebrating its projected benefits. That's not analysis. That's curation.
The 0-2% RevPAR growth guide is the number that should get more attention than it's getting. Core RevPAR grew 3.2% in Q4 2025 (5.7% excluding the Royal Palm renovation drag). Guiding 0-2% for the full portfolio in 2026 means management is pricing in continued renovation disruption and possibly softer demand. For a company spending a quarter-billion in CapEx this year, 0-2% top-line growth means the margin improvement has to come almost entirely from mix shift and expense discipline, not from demand acceleration. That's a tight needle to thread with $3.8 billion in debt and a major maturity on the calendar.
Analyst consensus sits at "Hold" with a $12-12.33 price target. The 9% dividend yield looks generous until you run it against the balance sheet. An owner I talked to once said something I think about whenever I see a high-yield REIT: "They're paying me to hold the risk they can't sell." That's not always true. But with Park, the question is whether $1.00 per share in annual dividends adequately compensates for the refinancing risk on $1.28 billion in CMBS debt, the execution risk on multiple simultaneous renovations, and a RevPAR environment that management itself is calling essentially flat. The math works if everything goes right. Check again on what "works" means if it doesn't.
Here's what I'd say to asset managers watching Park or any publicly-traded lodging REIT running this playbook right now. The "capital recycling" narrative sounds clean in an investor presentation, but at property level it means two things: the non-core hotels being sold are about to get new owners who may or may not honor existing management contracts, and the core hotels absorbing CapEx dollars are going to run with renovation disruption for quarters, not weeks. If you're managing a property inside a REIT portfolio that's been tagged "non-core," your disposition timeline IS your planning horizon. Don't wait for the transaction to close to start protecting your team. And if you're at a core property watching $50M in renovation spend show up on your doorstep, build your disruption model around 18 months of pain, not 12. This is what I call the Renovation Reality Multiplier... the promised timeline and the real timeline are never the same number, and the gap comes straight out of your operating performance.