Summit Hotel Properties, Inc. (NYSE:INN) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript May 2, 2024 9:00 AM ET
Company Participants
Adam Wudel – SVP, Finance, Capital Market and Treasurer
Jon Stanner – President & Chief Executive Officer
Trey Conkling – Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Conference Call Participants
Austin Wurschmidt – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Bill Crow – Raymond James
Chris Woronka – Deutsche Bank
Michael Bellisario – Baird
Operator
Welcome to the Summit Hotel Properties’ 2024 First Quarter Earnings Conference Call.
I will now be passing the line to Adam Wudel, Senior Vice President of Finance, Capital Markets and Treasurer.
Adam Wudel
Thank you, Howard, and good morning. I am joined today by Summit Hotel Properties’ President and Chief Executive Officer, Jon Stanner; and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Trey Conkling.
Please note that many of our comments today are considered forward-looking statements as defined by federal securities laws. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties both known and unknown, as described in our SEC filings. Forward-looking statements that we make today are effective only as of today, May 2, 2024, and we undertake no duty to update them later. You can find copies of our SEC filings and earnings release, which contain reconciliations to non-GAAP financial measures referenced on this call on our website at www.shpreit.com.
Please welcome Summit Hotel Properties’ President and CEO, Jon Stanner.
Jon Stanner
Thanks, Adam, and thank you all for joining us today for our first quarter 2024 earnings conference call. We were extremely pleased with our first quarter operating performance and financial results as adjusted EBITDAre increased 10% and adjusted FFO increased 14% compared to the first quarter of last year. Pro forma RevPAR increased 1.5% year-over-year and meaningfully outperformed the total US lodging industry and upscale chain scale by 130 basis points and 140 basis points, respectively. Our asset management team and operating partners did a terrific job managing expenses during the quarter, resulting in hotel EBITDA growth of 6% and margin expansion of over 80 basis points compared to the first quarter of last year. And yesterday, we announced the closing of three additional asset sales, an increase in our common dividend and a revised 2024 guidance range that reflects our strong first quarter results and a constructive outlook for the remainder of the year.
On today’s call, Trey and I will provide more details on our first quarter results and recent capital allocation activity, as well as highlight our longer term view on the industry outlook and Summit’s relative positioning. Fundamentals continued to improve across the company’s portfolio in the first quarter as our RevPAR growth was driven by a 3% increase in occupancy, predominantly concentrated in urban and suburban markets, which was partially offset by a 1.4% decrease in average rate versus the prior year, which was predominantly concentrated in outperforming leisure-oriented markets. Our RevPAR growth continues to be driven by weekday and urban demand, which increased approximately 4% and 3%, respectively, in the first quarter. More specifically, total portfolio RevPAR on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays increased by 5% year-over-year and a robust 7% when isolating those days of the week to the company’s urban portfolio, further evidence of strong group business and the continuing recovery of corporate transient demand.
As we discussed on our last call, we believe our portfolio is well positioned for relative outperformance given our exposure to several urban markets that have been slower to recover. Five of those markets in particular, the San Francisco Bay Area, New Orleans, Baltimore, Minneapolis and Louisville, represented 19 of our owned hotels in the first quarter that collectively finished 2023 approximately $25 million below 2019 hotel EBITDA levels. On RevPAR that was less than 80% recovered. In the first quarter, these 19 hotels produced RevPAR growth of 12% and hotel EBITDA growth of 44%, highlighted by 22% RevPAR growth in Baltimore and 16% RevPAR growth in both New Orleans and Minneapolis. Encouragingly, we are beginning to see the recovery of technology-related business travel in our Silicon Valley asset, which grew RevPAR by over 40% during the quarter and nearly 30% after adjusting for renovation tail winds created last year. Downtown San Francisco remains the lone pocket of weakness among this portfolio, though RevPAR at our DoubleTree in the life science oriented Oyster Point submarket grew 7% in the quarter. Excluding our three San Francisco assets, RevPAR increased 17% in the remaining 16 hotels and EBITDA increased nearly 60% year-over-year in the first quarter. Second quarter pace for these lagging markets remains strong. It should continue to facilitate outsized growth in RevPAR and hotel EBITDA for the company.
The relative strength of our first quarter is further highlighted by significant market share gains across our portfolio. RevPAR index in the first quarter for the pro forma portfolio was 115%, an increase of 335 basis points, which was driven by occupancy share gains. Our portfolio’s market share is approaching the highest levels ever achieved outside of the pandemic era, and on a trailing twelve month basis, we’ve seen our biggest gains come from resort, airport and urban locations and from within the NCI portfolio.
As we look to the second quarter, preliminary April RevPAR growth is expected to actualize around 4% and benefited from continued midweek strength, the Easter shift and strong demand related to the solar eclipse in Dallas, Fort Worth, Austin, Indianapolis and Cleveland. While booking pace for our portfolio remains short-term in nature, RevPAR pace for May is encouraging and suggests that underlying demand trends remain stable heading into the peak summer travel months.
From a capital allocation standpoint, we continue to improve the overall quality of our portfolio and health of our balance sheet, including the disposition of three additional hotels subsequent to quarter end. In April, we closed on the sale of two wholly-owned hotels, the Courtyard and Spring Hill suites at the New Orleans Convention center, totaling 410 guest rooms for a gross sales price of $73 million. The sales price represents a 6.7% capitalization rate on the estimated 2024 NOI, including foregone near-term capital expenditure requirements. While New Orleans is one of the lagging markets we have identified as augmenting our growth profile, post asset sales, we still have ample exposure with six hotels in the market and believe our remaining assets are better located and have less near-term capital needs.
We also sold one non-core hotel in the GIC venture, the 119 guest room Hilton Garden Inn College station, for $11 million at an all in cap rate of less than 8% on estimated 2024 NOI. In total, over the last twelve months, we have sold nine hotels for a combined $131 million at a blended capitalization rate of approximately 5%, inclusive of approximately $44 million of foregone capital needs, based on the estimated trailing twelve month NOI at the time of each sale. The combined RevPAR for these hotels was approximately $87, which is nearly a 30% discount to the pro forma portfolio. Our disposition efforts have facilitated nearly a full term reduction in our net debt-to-EBITDA ratio, enhanced the quality and growth profile of our portfolio, and significantly reduced near-term CapEx requirements.
Last night, we announced that our Board of Directors approved a $0.02 per share increase in the common dividend on a quarterly basis to $0.08 per share or $0.32 per share on an annualized basis, which represents a 33% increase. The dividend increase is consistent with our strategy of prioritizing returning capital to shareholders and reflects our constructive outlook for our business and the stability of those cash flows. Our approach to our dividend reinstatement and subsequent growth has been to set payouts at levels that allow for consistent and meaningful increases over time while maintaining a conservative payout ratio to absorb any unforeseen deterioration in demand. With this most recent increase, our dividend yield is approximately 5% based on the current share price and our AFFO payout ratio increases to a modest 34% at the midpoint of our AFFO guidance range, which remains well below historical levels.
Finally, before I turn the call over to Trey, let me highlight a few observations about our industry and some its relative positioning that give us optimism for the future. While the recovery in travel demand post pandemic has been uneven by both segment and market, we are beginning to see a more meaningful recovery in many of those segments and markets which have lagged and which Summit has outsized exposure to, namely urban markets and those with a heavier reliance on business travel. We are also starting to benefit from a gradually easing labor environment, which we believe will facilitate margin changes more in line with historical norms, as utilization of contract labor declines and turnover abates. Combined with post-pandemic enhancements to the core select service operating model and an already superior margin profile, we believe the conditions for better relative future profitability growth exist. As has been well documented, supply growth in our industry is poised to remain subdued for an extended period of time, given elevated construction costs and tight development financing conditions. And finally, while macroeconomic growth is slowing in conjunction with tightening monetary policy, a deeper dive into recent trends suggest demand for services broadly and travel more specifically remains robust and enduring. Taken together, this all provides for a positive setup for longer term hotel level EBITDA growth.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to our CFO, Trey Conkling.
Trey Conkling
Thanks, Jon, and good morning everyone. The first quarter of 2024 represented a continuation of 2023 trends, as growth within our portfolio was once again driven by the company’s urban and suburban hotels, which each produced RevPAR increases of approximately 2.5% in the first quarter. Strength in our urban and suburban portfolios was driven by several of our key Sunbelt markets such as Dallas Fort Worth, Orlando, Charlotte and Houston, all of which continued to generate RevPAR growth meaningfully above the industry average. As Jon mentioned, several of our lagging markets, such as the San Francisco Bay Area, Baltimore, Minneapolis, Louisville, and New Orleans, also experienced strong first quarters, with RevPAR increasing 12% in aggregate. We expect continued outperformance in these lagging markets for the balance of the year.
In addition to the urban and suburban portfolios, our airport hotels were amongst our strongest performers as first quarter RevPAR increased over 5% for this portfolio. From a national perspective, TSA statistics indicate air travel increased 6% in the first quarter of the year, and recent commentary from Delta, American and other major carriers point towards accelerating corporate transient demand and a strong summer travel season. From a Summit perspective, airport hotel performance was driven by our five Grapevine hotels, where RevPAR increased 6.5% in the first quarter, benefiting from double-digit year-over-year passenger growth at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport. In addition, our Courtyard and Residence Inn Metairie generated a first quarter RevPAR increase of 36% as a result of the recently completed renovation at the Courtyard and 5% year-over-year passenger growth at New Orleans Louis Armstrong International Airport.
Although our resort portfolio declined modestly year-over-year in the first quarter, including a challenging Super Bowl comparison for our Phoenix hotels and several disruptive renovations, we are pleased with the continued strength in our resort markets where average rates and RevPAR remained 14% and 8% above pre pandemic levels, respectively. We continue to invest in several of our resort hotels such as the Embassy Suites, Tucson; Hotel Indigo, Asheville; and Courtyard Fort, Lauderdale Beach, given the constructive long-term outlook for leisure demand.
From a segmentation perspective, group demand continues to serve as a key catalyst for the company as first quarter group RevPAR increased in 40 of our 43 markets. In addition, group RevPAR increased across all location types except for our resort portfolio. For the quarter, four weeks group RevPAR increased over 3% with weekday group RevPAR increasing approximately 4%. Other segments that demonstrated growth in the first quarter include negotiated discount and contract. The success of our revenue management strategies is perhaps best illustrated in the NCI portfolio where group and negotiated RevPAR increased by 19% and 15%, respectively, as the operating strategies of those hotels have been reconfigured to take advantage of today’s demand trends.
In the first quarter, non-rooms revenue in the pro forma portfolio increased 8%, driven largely by midweek occupancy gains as well as the shift in business mix towards group and corporate transient demand. While higher outlet utilization as well as banquet and catering demand resulted in a 3% year-over-year increase in food and beverage revenues, the ongoing benefit of favorable parking contract renegotiations and increased resort fee capture drove non F&B revenue growth of 14% for the quarter.
Once again, the NewcrestImage portfolio was an outperformer, generating 6% RevPAR growth in the quarter. As previously mentioned, group and negotiated demand were the primary drivers of top line growth, further validation of our team’s successful application of strategic sales clusters. As a result, the NCI portfolio’s market share increased 420 basis points compared to the first quarter of last year, driven primarily by gains in occupancy. The strength in top line performance within the NCI portfolio, coupled with slowing expense growth resulted in hotel EBITDA increasing approximately 12% and hotel EBITDA margin expansion of more than 130 basis points in the first quarter.
The operating expense environment continues to moderate and our asset management team did a fantastic job during the first quarter controlling costs and managing the middle of the P&L. Total expenses increased 2.4% year-over-year. Combined with the increase in occupancy cost per occupied room declined 1.6 from the prior year period. From a labor expense perspective, we are experiencing moderating wage growth, reduced utilization of contract labor, and lower turnover. Relative to first quarter 2023, wages increased 2.5%, which is increasingly in line with historical norms. Contract labor declined by 11% on a nominal basis and by 14% on a per occupied room basis versus the prior year, respectively. This represents the sixth consecutive quarter contract labor has declined on a per occupied room basis. Today, contract labor comprises 12% of our total labor spend, down from 18% at its peak in 2022, but still meaningfully above pre-pandemic levels, suggesting additional room for improvement moving forward.
FTE count increased modestly during the quarter but continues to remain 15% to 20% below 2019 levels. A more constructive expense environment served as a key driver to improving hotel EBITDA margins, which expanded year-over-year by nearly 90 basis points for our same-store portfolio and over 80 basis points for our pro forma portfolio in the first quarter. Pro forma hotel EBITDA for the first quarter was $68.6 million, a 6% increase from the first quarter of last year. Same-store hotel EBITDA flow through for the quarter was approximately 62%, despite RevPAR growth that was entirely occupancy driven. Notably, hotel EBITDA increased in each of the company’s wholly-owned GIC joint venture and other joint venture portfolios.
Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $48.8 million, a 10% increase compared to the first quarter of 2023, and adjusted FFO was $30 million, or $0.24 per share, a 14% increase versus the same period last year.
From a capital expenditure standpoint, in the first quarter, we invested approximately $18 million in our portfolio on a consolidated basis and approximately $15 million on a pro rata basis. CapEx spend for the first quarter was driven by transformational renovations at our Hilton Garden Inn, Milpitas; Residence Inn, Hillsboro; Embassy Suites, Tucson; Courtyard, New Haven; and Hotel Indigo, Asheville. We continue to ensure the quality and relative age of our portfolio positions the company to drive profitability and market share.
Turning to the balance sheet, the net proceeds from the New Orleans and College Station asset sales were used to repay the $55 million balance outstanding on the company’s corporate credit facility as of March 31 and to reduce the balance of the NCI term loan from $402 million at March $31 to $396 million today. As Jon mentioned, our net debt-to-EBITDA has declined by nearly one turn over the past year, driven by accretive non-core asset sales and continued growth in hotel EBITDA. In January, we entered into a $100 million interest rate swap, fixing one month term SOFR at 3.765% for debt within our GIC joint venture. This swap, which is 150 basis points below the current SOFR rate, becomes effective in October of 2024 and expires in January of 2026. Today, the net asset position of our swap portfolio is approximately $20 million.
As a result of our interest rate management efforts, our balance sheet is well positioned with an average pro rata interest rate of 4.7% and approximately 77% of our pro rata share of debt fixed after consideration of interest rate swaps. When accounting for the company’s Series E, F and Z preferred equity within our capital structure, we are approximately 80% fixed. With no significant maturities until 2026, a fully extended average length to maturity of nearly 3.5 years and an overall liquidity position of approximately $370 million, we believe the company is well positioned to achieve its growth objectives.
On May 1, our Board of Directors declared a quarterly common dividend of share representing a 33% increase from the previous quarter. The resulting annualized dividend of $0.32 share represents a dividend yield of approximately 5%. The increased dividend continues to represent a prudent AFFO payout ratio, leaving ample room for potential increases over time, assuming no material changes to the current operating environment. The company continues to prioritize striking an appropriate balance between returning capital to shareholders, reducing corporate leverage, and maintaining liquidity for future growth opportunities.
Included in our press release last evening, we updated our full year guidance for 2024 operational metrics as well as certain non-operational items following our April transaction activity. This outlook is based on management’s current view and does not account for any unexpected changes to the current operating environment, nor does it include any future transaction or capital markets activity. Based on the company’s first quarter operating results as well as our future outlook, we are reiterating full year guidance for RevPAR growth of 2% to 4%. We are maintaining our adjusted EBITDA range of $188 million to $200 million despite foregone hotel EBITDA of approximately $4 million through the balance of 2024 due to April’s three asset sales. This further reflects the strength of our first quarter operating results. Furthermore, we are also maintaining our adjusted FFO range of $0.90 per share to $1 per share despite the foregone hotel EBITDA from asset sales. At the midpoint of our RevPAR guidance range, we would expect hotel EBITDA margins to contract approximately 50 basis points year-over-year. This implies a 25 basis point improvement to the margin guidance provided in February 2024. We expect pro rata interest expense excluding the amortization of deferred financing costs to be approximately $55 million to $60 million, Series E and Series F preferred dividends to be $15.9 million, Series Z preferred distributions to be $2.6 million, and pro rata capital expenditures to range from $65 million to $85 million. As previously mentioned, given the increased size of the GIC joint venture, the fee income payable to Summit now covers nearly 15% of annual cash corporate G&A expense, excluding any promote distribution Summit may earn during the year.
And with that, we’ll open the call to your questions.
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our first question or comment comes from the line of Austin Wurschmidt from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Mr. Wurschmidt, your line is open.
Austin Wurschmidt
Great, thanks. Good morning guys. Jon, you flagged the strength of your expansion markets in your prepared remarks, which I believe account for around 20% of hotels. And I was wondering if you could break out what RevPAR growth you’re assuming this year for these expansion kind of higher growth markets that have lagged in the recovery versus the balance of the portfolio. And how much of this growth that you’re seeing do you think is sustainable demand versus more one-time benefits to the markets event driven type business?
Jon Stanner
Yes. Thanks and good morning, Austin. Look, we do — obviously we had a really strong first quarter in these kind of lagging markets, in these growth markets. We expect that to continue for the year. We haven’t provided a specific breakout for the market, but I think on a full year basis these will be several hundred basis points of incremental growth above and beyond what we see in the quarter. The portfolio grew 12% for the quarter this year versus the full portfolio — sorry, for the quarter versus the full portfolio at 1.5%. Our expectation for the second quarter is similar. We think that we’ll have strong growth, probably closer to double-digit growth on a blended basis in these markets. Markets like Louisville where there’s 150th running the Kentucky derby this week and it hosts PGA Championship at Valhalla later in the month. The signs in our pace in Minneapolis, Baltimore, even in Milpitas and Silicon Valley all continue to be very positive. So we don’t look at this as kind of a one-time event in the first quarter. We think we’ll see similar outperformance in the second quarter. And again, this should really enhance our growth profile for the full year.
Austin Wurschmidt
So when you kind of take the other side and look at maybe what’s weighing, I guess, where are you seeing, I guess, the softest pieces and what segments or markets give you a little bit of pause when you look at pace, kind of at the other end of the range?
Jon Stanner
Yeah, in the first quarter, it was mostly around some leisure related markets that had ADR declines. I think demand is still solid into the vast majority of those markets, but we did see some softness on the rate side. For us, we have a couple markets in this — a couple assets in ski markets where we just didn’t have as strong of a snow season as we did last year, so we were down close to double digits in Silverthorne and steamboat, for example, for the quarter. I don’t look at that as any type of systemic demand issue. I think that more than anything, you had very difficult comps year-over-year. And I think as you get into the second and third quarter, into this more peach summer travel season, you’ll see a normalization of those rate patterns. When I look at our expectations and our pace for Q2 and into Q3, we don’t have the most visibility in our quarter, but when I look out into May and June, our pace statistics, one, are very positive and, two, is encouragingly, it’s very broad based. The vast majority of our markets are showing positive of pace outlooks for the quarter in particular.
Austin Wurschmidt
Yeah, that’s all helpful. And maybe just one on the balance sheet. You guys have clearly made a lot of progress. You alluded to kind of the dividend increase and signaling that that provides. I guess, leverage still remains above your long-term targets. What sort of next steps to kind of further decrease leverage towards your longer term targets, especially if financing markets continue to remain challenging.
Trey Conkling
Hey, Austin, it’s Trey. I would say one thing is we — you look at the financing markets, obviously, we’re pleased with the fact that we don’t really have any near-term maturities until 2026 and we’re effectively kind of hedged at 80%, so that part feels good. As we look to de-lever the balance sheet, I think what we’ll do is we’ll be very opportunistic around it, which could potentially be select asset sales over time to the extent that they’re accretive and similar to what Jon had talked about before, but really I think it comes in the form of a rebound in hotel EBITDA in some of these lagging markets. And so to the extent that you see these five markets that Jon have highlighted continue to come back, hotel EBITDA will solve a lot of those issues today. I think with the asset sales that we announced this quarter, it de-levered the balance sheet probably another quarter turn, so we’re down close to five times. An incremental movement down into the fours probably comes from just improved operations through the balance of the year.
Jon Stanner
Yeah. Austin, it is Jon, maybe just to add a little bit of additional color there. I think as Trey alluded to, and we talked about this in the prepared remarks, we’ve sold nine assets. We’ve sold over $130 million of assets and we’ve been, I think, really strategic around how we’ve done it and able to find opportunities to sell assets to at relatively low cap rates. We haven’t given up much cash flow in doing that. And we felt like taking this very targeted, more tactical approach to it ultimately led to better results than just kind of a rip the band aid and sell a large portfolio in an environment where it’s still very difficult to get transactions done, particularly larger transactions that need a bigger financing check.
Austin Wurschmidt
Thanks, Jon. Thanks, Trey.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Bill Crow from Raymond James. Mr. Crow, your line is now open.
Bill Crow
Great, thank you. Good morning, guys. I’m looking for a little bit of color on any incremental demand changes you’re seeing on, say, Monday and Thursday nights. Are business travelers extending their trips at all at this juncture? Are we still waiting for a return to office? And I guess the second part of that would be additional color on what you’re seeing on weekends. Certainly there’s a growing concern that consumer spending might be weakening, especially at the lower end, but perhaps, and maybe Starbucks is evidence of it, perhaps moving up the income scale a little bit. What do you — what are your weekends telling you guys?
Jon Stanner
Yeah, sure. Thanks, Bill. Good morning. I think from a day a week perspective, as we said, we’re seeing the best growth Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. It’s where our occupancy has frankly lagged the most relative to pre-pandemic level, so it’s where we would expect to see it and, again, it’s driven by the urban portfolio. And I do think it reflects the strength — the relative strength of group demand in this kind of ever-grind higher in business, transient travel. Our best day of the week this quarter was Monday night, actually. And I think if you go back and listen to kind of our commentary in previous quarters, we talked about the compression of mid-week demand on the BT side into Tuesdays and Wednesday nights. We are starting to see that bleed into Monday nights to some extent, in particular in the first quarter. And so I think, look, the trends are coming off of obviously a lower baseline from a BT perspective, midweek and an urban perspective, but that is where we continue to see the vast majority of our growth. I do expect that to continue at least through the second quarter and likely through the balance of the year, as I mentioned. Our pace stats look very, very strong, particularly in May, but really, as we even look out into June, into the full second quarter, I will say that our pace statistics are better midweek than they are on the weekends, but they’re still positive on the weekends and rates are still positive year-over-year from a pace perspective.
Bill Crow
So do you see any weakening from the consumer front on weekends? I mean, you said the pace is better during the weekday, but is there real — should there be real concerns about the consumer maybe changing spending habits?
Jon Stanner
I don’t think we’ve seen a whole lot of evidence to suggest that people are cutting back on leisure travel. I think a lot of the rate, what we describe as rate softness has every bit as much to do with how strong rates have been in 2022, in the first quarter of 2023. And I do think you’ll see some of that normalization play out over the summer. I know there’s a lot of concern around general consumer spending. I know we’ve all seen the performance of kind of the lower end of the chain scales in the industry. We just haven’t seen that really play out in our markets. To the extent that we’ve seen softness, it’s been more rate oriented, and I think it’s been more oriented in our ski markets where we just didn’t have the same strength of a snow season as we did last year. I don’t think we’re going to have the same ability to drive these enormous rate gains that we saw particularly in 2022, but the pace data, again, looks, looks stable. We’ve tried to be forward leaning on this, knowing that in some of these markets we’ll try to build some level of group-based demand in these assets to help drive incremental pricing on the retail customer.
Bill Crow
Great. I’m going to apologize because I’m going to ask one more question here. On the asset sales, I’m curious whether you’re marketing any additional assets for sale and how you’re thinking about balancing the sale of properties that are in the wholly-owned portfolio versus those that are in the GIC portfolio? And that’s it for me. Thanks.
Jon Stanner
Yeah, thanks, Bill. I would say we’ve tried to be very opportunistic, as I said to Austin, around assets sales. We’ve targeted assets that have been lower RevPAR assets, those assets that had larger CapEx needs that we could sell most efficiently in a market where, as I said earlier, it’s still difficult to sell bigger, chunkier type of assets; New Orleans was the exception to that. I would say that we’ll continue to be thoughtful and opportunistic around asset sales. We’d like to continue to do it in a similar way that we’ve done it before, where it’s very targeted, it’s very focused on finding, oftentimes the local owner operator that’s willing to pay a little bit extra that may price things on a per pound or a per key basis and it was a little less focused on in place NOI. And so there have been a few asset sales. We’ve sold a couple of assets out of the GIC venture. Both of those assets were assets that were part of the NCI transaction that we identified when we did the transaction as being non long term, holds non-core assets that we were going to try to sell prior to doing a renovation. And so if there’s been one kind of consistent theme to what we sold, it’s been assets that we’re ultimately going to need a fairly large capital infusion from a renovation perspective, where we just felt like our capital was better deployed elsewhere. And I would expect that to continue to be a large driver of our capital allocation thesis going forward.
Bill Crow
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Chris Woronka from Deutsche Bank. Mr. Woronka, your line is now open.
Chris Woronka
Okay, thanks. Hey, good morning, guys. I jumped on a little late, so apologize if there’s any repeat question. I guess the first topic was kind of on costs and really on labor. We read headlines, I think yesterday there were some actions in some cities. How much visibility do you guys think you have on costs, really on labor, as you look out for the balance of the year? And as you look back in the first quarter or even last year, were there any intra quarter, intra year surprises, whether it was market specific, where you have to bring wages up or something like that? Any comments you can give us on your outlook for that? Thanks.
Trey Conkling
Hey, Chris, it’s Trey. I guess what I’ll do is I’ll comment a little bit on the trends that we’ve seen in the expense profile of the business as we’ve kind of gone through the past half a year. If you look to the second half of last year, I think our operating expenses were up 4% in the third quarter and the fourth quarter. If you look at that on a cost per occupied room, they were up kind of 1.5%. If you. If you fast forward to the first quarter here, operating expenses were up about 2.5% and cost per occupied room were down 1.6%. The first quarter represented the sixth consecutive quarter of cost per occupied room declining, or, I’m sorry, on contract labor declining and contract labor, I think, is the biggest variable that we’ve seen in how our expenses are evolving as we’re going forward here. And so continuing to have progress on the contract labor front is something that we’ve seen and something that we hope will persist through the balance of the year. I think the thing that’s not talked about quite as much is turnover in the business. And I would say that turnover in the last year, if you look to kind of 2022, 2023 was probably two times as high as it was pre-pandemic. And now turnover this quarter versus the previous first quarter of 2023 was down about 20%. So to the extent that turnover continues to moderate, that is significantly beneficial to us, both from a training cost perspective and from overall productivity. So looking out, we don’t have the longest term view as a select service portfolio, but I think that the trends that we’ve seen over the last three to four quarters are fairly encouraging.
Chris Woronka
Okay, great. Thanks, Trey. And the follow up question. It really has to do with — we hear a lot about conversions from the big brand companies and how it’s become a bigger part of their unit growth strategy. Do you guys have a view as you look across all your markets? I mean, obviously conversion doesn’t add new supply, but it might add a new brand family member, something you already have. Is there any way to measure that in terms of — is there a net positive, net negative? And secondarily to that, as we see Marriott Hilton kind of go down a little bit on the chain scales and enter the lower chain scales, which you guys don’t really play in, but is there any — do you think there’s ever going to be any impact there with someone who goes from a Hampton and now goes to a Spark or a True. Anyway that’s — I know it is a long question, but is there any way to think about that for your business? Thanks.
Jon Stanner
Yes, thanks, Chris. It’s Jon. Look, we’ve obviously followed closely what the brands have done, and I don’t think that it’s terribly surprising that they’re searching for additional channels to help grow net unit growth. I do think that it’s a market by market type of analysis when you look at the impact. I would say we haven’t felt it yet. It’s not something that is high on my list of concerns. I do think to the extent that you’re bringing in additional units and rooms into a brand family in a market, it can have an impact. I don’t think a lot of those units are going to be units that we’re competing for redemption type of customers for. So something that we’re monitoring and again it’s not something that we’ve spent a lot of time actively searching to get into some of those new product types or — and we certainly haven’t felt the impact of them coming into our markets yet. And then again, a lot of the initial rollout of these new brands, frankly, have been in markets that we’re not in. They’ve been in more secondary and tertiary markets.
Chris Woronka
Okay. Okay, good. Good to hear. Thanks, Jon.
Jon Stanner
Thanks, Chris.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Michael Bellisario from Baird. Mr. Bellisario, your line is now open.
Michael Bellisario
Thanks. Good morning, guys.
Jon Stanner
Good morning, Mike.
Michael Bellisario
I want to go back to the leisure commentary. Did you see cancellations occur? I know you mentioned the weakness in the snow and mountain locations, but did you not see ADR pick up close to the date of arrival and maybe was that because occupancy was softer? Maybe just help us understand the timeline of events that occurred that led to the leisure softness on the ADR side.
Jon Stanner
Yeah we didn’t see cancellations. It just slower pickup and I think part of it, again, especially in some of these ski markets, you get some last minute pickup when the snow is really good. We saw that last year was an incredible year from a snow perspective in these markets. And so you got a lot of last minute bookings, of people seeing what was happening on the mountains and booking close to their stay. We just got less of that pickup this year, and I’m not terribly concerned about it long term. I think we’re going to have really strong summers in both of those markets. And the summer has actually become a stronger season than the ski season for some of these markets but it did influence our rates in the first quarter, but I didn’t interpret the rate performance in those two markets in particular as there being some sort of read through to softening leisure demand. I think that there was just — it was more of an issue around pricing and last minute pickup.
Michael Bellisario
Any different takeaways from Asheville, Fort Lauderdale, Tucson, Phoenix, other leisure focused markets? Did you see the softer demand?
Jon Stanner
Yeah, those are — you highlighted some of our leisure focused markets. We’re under renovation in Asheville, so we don’t have a clean comp there. We did see some similar rate softening in Fort Lauderdale, and some of that was around spring break, and I think that’s been fairly well documented what happened in kind of the Miami Fort Lauderdale market in and around spring break. Demand was fine, a little less last minute pickup in a little rate softness. And again, I think you’ve got to put into context that rate softness is on rates that are 20%, 30% higher than in 2019, and we just didn’t have the same level of pickup. I’m not sure that I really would extrapolate that into, again, something that is showing real weakness on a leisure side. I think we’ve got to be mindful of what those comparisons look like and I do think the comparisons were mostly difficult in the first quarter.
Michael Bellisario
Got it. Understood. And then just my follow up, switching gears just on CapEx, can you maybe provide some numbers around what a standard seven year, 14 year renovation cost today? What did it cost a couple of years ago? And maybe what’s the hardest part of the underwriting process for CapEx projects and how you internally decide which projects to do? Thanks.
Jon Stanner
Yeah, we spent a lot — it’s a good question. We spend an awful lot of time on this internally, particularly as we’ve talked about before, I think the industry broadly is just underinvested in renovations. And so, one, I think that’ll create some opportunities for those of us that are better capitalized going forward, but we’ve always taken great pride in the physical condition of our portfolio and ensuring we don’t have a huge buildup of deferred CapEx in the portfolio. And there’s no question that the cost to renovate some of these hotels are significantly higher than they were pre-pandemic. They’re I would say 25% or 30% higher and depending on the market, potentially even more. I will say in the last 30 days, we’ve actually finally re-priced a couple of renovations lower than we did last year or even six months, months ago. So you’re starting to see, it’s not really labor or wage related, but you’re starting to see shipping costs come down, you’re starting to see some commodity costs come down, and so we believe at the very least, the increase in cost of those renovations has stopped. And we’ve got some level of hope or optimism that we’ll see some decreases in the cost to renovate these assets because it did — as I said, it got very, very expensive, especially relative to where we are renovating pre-pandemic.
Michael Bellisario
Thanks. Just any broad strokes around kind of per key costs for those renovations?
Jon Stanner
Yeah seven years we were doing $15,000 or $20,000 a key, probably pre pandemic and they’re 25% higher than that today, 14 years, we’re probably another $5,000 to $10,000 a key on top of that.
Michael Bellisario
Got it. That’s helpful. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. I’m showing no additional questions in the queue at this time. I’d like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Jon Stanner for any closing remarks.
Jon Stanner
Great. Thank you all for joining us today. We look forward to seeing many of you at one of the conferences over the spring and summer. Thank you.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today’s conference. This concludes the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone have a wonderful day.