Hotel Stocks Beat the S&P by 670 Basis Points. The REIT Split Tells the Real Story.
The Baird Hotel Stock Index posted its third straight monthly gain in February, up 5.9%. But brands and REITs are living in two different markets, and the gap is widening.
The Baird Hotel Stock Index gained 5.9% in February 2026, its third consecutive monthly increase, putting it up 7.6% year-to-date against an S&P 500 that's barely positive at 0.5%. Global hotel brands outperformed the S&P by 670 basis points in a single month. Hotel REITs underperformed their benchmark by 200 basis points. Same industry. Two completely different investor narratives.
Let's decompose this. Wyndham jumped 12.4% in February. Pebblebrook gained 12.3%. Ashford Hospitality Trust dropped 23.9%. That's not sector rotation. That's the market pricing in a very specific thesis: asset-light models with fee-based revenue streams are worth a premium, and leveraged ownership vehicles carrying real estate risk are getting punished. The brands collect fees whether RevPAR grows 2% or 6%. The REITs actually own the buildings... and the CapEx, and the debt service, and the PIP obligations. When rates decline (even slightly), the fee collector barely notices. The owner feels it in every line below revenue.
The catalyst here is better-than-expected RevPAR growth in January and February, plus Q4 earnings that came in above consensus. U.S. hotel RevPAR hit $105 for the week ending March 7, the highest weekly number since October 2025. Analysts are calling the initial 2026 brand outlooks "somewhat conservative," which in Wall Street language means they expect beats. That's fine for the stock price. The question is what "better-than-expected RevPAR" means for the person who owns the hotel. A 4.8% RevPAR gain driven by rate sounds great... until you check whether expenses grew 6% in the same period. I've audited enough management company reports to know that revenue growth without margin improvement is a treadmill. The brand's stock goes up. The owner's cash-on-cash return doesn't move.
The REIT underperformance deserves a closer look. Declining interest rates should theoretically help real estate. But the market is rotating into more defensive REIT sub-sectors (data centers, healthcare) and away from lodging. That tells you institutional investors still see hotel REITs as cyclical risk, regardless of the RevPAR prints. An asset manager at a mid-cap hotel REIT told me last year, "We beat our RevPAR budget by 3% and our stock dropped. Try explaining that to your board." He wasn't wrong. The math works for the operations. The market doesn't care about the operations. The market cares about the multiple, and the multiple is a confidence vote on the next 18 months, not the last 90 days.
For owners and REIT investors, the number that matters isn't the Baird Index. It's the spread between RevPAR growth and total expense growth at the property level. If that spread is positive, the stock performance eventually follows. If it's negative, you're subsidizing a headline. Check again.
Here's what I'd tell you if we were sitting down with the numbers. If you're an owner reporting to REIT asset management right now, don't let the stock performance distract from flow-through. Pull your February P&L, compare RevPAR growth to total expense growth, and have that number ready before your next call. If the spread is negative, you need to know it before they do. And if your management company is sending you a press release about "outperforming the index"... ask them what your GOP margin did. That's the number that pays your mortgage.