AH September 2025

September 2025 | Volume 25 #240

The Voice of Asian American Hoteliers

Tailor made fin

tech on the rise

General accounting apps fall short,

developers say

Hotel companies in the news include: Vision Hospitality Group, Peachtree Group, Woodbine Development Corp., DD

Partners LLC, Gopal Inc., Paso Robles Hotel Partners

The business

of lobby retail

More than 900 attend

LendingCon 2025

1To access DIRECTV HD service, HD equipment req’d. Number of HD channels varies based on package selection. 3-MONTHS ON US OFFER: Offer ends 12/31/2024. Offer is available to new Hospitality, Institutions, and Universities with a minimum 3-year programming agreement. Eligibility: New DIRECTV Customer with a

minimum 3-year agreement. Customers selecting the Quick Connect, AEP, or Nonprofit Offer are not eligible for the 3-Months on Us Offer. Excludes NFL SUNDAY TICKET Offer. If Customer adds any additional DIRECTV programming after the date of activation, such DIRECTV programming will be excluded from the 3-Months on

Us Offer. Customer will receive one (1) upfront lump sum bill credit equal to the cost of three (3) months of the DIRECTV programming within 1 to 2 billing cycles. Customer is responsible for any taxes, surcharges, and fees. Credit includes base package, tech fee and all add-ons. DIRECTV RESIDENTIAL EXPERIENCE (DRE)

OFFER: Offer ends 12/31/24. Offer is available to new or renewing Hospitality and Institutions customers with a 5-year programming agreement. Properties must subscribe to SELECT™ ($7.15/room/mo.) or above. SELECT™ promotional bundle price includes SELECT™ ($6.50/room/mo.) and technology fee ($0.65/room/mo.).

Bundled rate will be listed as two separate line items on customer bill. Offer is eligible for an HD Equipment Subsidy of $80 per room for a DRE System. 15 room minimum is req’d per property. IN THE EVENT YOU FAIL TO MAINTAIN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO THE REQUIRED PROGRAMMING PACKAGES, YOU AGREE TO

PAY AN EARLY CANCELLATION FEE EQUAL TO THE FULL SUBSIDY AMOUNT YOU RECEIVED PRORATED BY THE NUMBER OF MONTHS YOU PAID FOR THE REQUIRED PROGRAMMING PACKAGES DURING THE COMMITMENT PERIOD. Payment is due within thirty (30) days of receipt of a notice of failure to

complete the commitment period. INSTALLATION: Custom installation charges apply, and installation fee is based on property size. Applicable use tax adjustment may apply on retail value of installation. Availability of DIRECTV service may vary by location. In certain markets, programming/pricing may vary. Make and

model of system at DIRECTV’s sole discretion. Offers void where prohibited or restricted. Programming available separately. Receipt of DIRECTV programming subject to terms of the DIRECTV Terms of Service for Hospitality Establishments and the DIRECTV Terms of Service for Institutions; copy provided with new customer

information packet. Taxes not included. DIRECTV programming, hardware, pricing, terms and conditions subject to change at any time. 2HBO® AND CINEMAX® PACKAGE (New Customers): Offer ends 12/31/24. Only available to new customers that have not received or subscribed to DIRECTV for 12 months prior to activation.

Monthly rate is ($2.25/room/mo.) and requires a 3- or 5-year programming agreement. Customer must also subscribe to SELECT™ ($6.50/room/mo.) or above (with DRE or COM). University accounts excluded. HBO AND CINEMAX PACKAGE (Existing Customers): Available to existing DIRECTV subscribers with a 3- or 5-year

programming agreement. Monthly charge is ($2.75/room/mo.). University accounts excluded. IN THE EVENT YOU FAIL TO MAINTAIN YOUR PROGRAMMING AGREEMENT, YOU AGREE THAT DIRECTV MAY CHARGE YOU AN EARLY CANCELLATION FEE. CANCELLATION FEES ARE BASED ON PROGRAMMING PACKAGE

SELECTION AND COMMITMENT PERIOD. In certain markets, programming/pricing may vary. Offers void where prohibited or restricted. Hardware and programming available separately. Taxes not included. DIRECTV programming, hardware, pricing, terms and conditions subject to change at any time. HBO,® Cinemax® and

related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. 3Paramount+ with SHOWTIME OFFER: Subject to change and may be discontinued at any time. The Paramount+ with SHOWTIME programming offer ($0.99/room/mo.) is available only as a 2nd Premium add-on. Offer available to qualifying

new or existing Hospitality accounts with a 3- or 5-year programming agreement and must not have received Paramount+ with SHOWTIME programming from DIRECTV or any other distributor at a greater retail value (i.e., $1.99 or more) from DIRECTV or any other distributor during the 24 months preceding the date of activation

of the Paramount+ with SHOWTIME Package. Customer must also subscribe to FAMILY™ ($3.50 room/mo) or above (with DRE or COM). After the applicable promotional period (3 or 5 years) ends, then-prevailing rate for Paramount+ with SHOWTIME applies unless canceled or changed by customer calling 1.888.388.4249 prior

to end of the promotional period. Offer may not be combined with any other Paramount+ with SHOWTIME offer. © 2024 Showtime Networks Inc., a Paramount Company. SHOWTIME and related marks are trademarks of Showtime Networks Inc. Paramount+ and related marks are trademarks of Paramount Pictures Corporation.

Individual programs, devices and marks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved. NFL, the NFL Shield design and the NFL SUNDAY TICKET name and logo are registered trademarks of the NFL and its affiliates. ©2024 DIRECTV. DIRECTV and all other DIRECTV marks are trademarks of DIRECTV, LLC. All

other marks are the property of their respective owners.

Offer ends 12/31/24. New or renewing approved H&I customers only. 5-year programming agreement req’d. Credit card required (except MA & PA). Early Cancellation Fee may apply.

13 channels of premium entertainment including original

series, movies, sports, documentaries and more.

Offer ends 12/31/24.

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Cover Story

News

LENDINGCON’25

Product Feature

20 | Tailor made fin tech on the rise

General accounting apps fall short, developers say

5 | Trump’s tariff shock, Modi’s

swadeshi call

U.S. imposes 50 percent tariff on India, threatening

economic outlook

6 | Trump reviewing 55 million visas

More than 6,000 student visas revoked this year for

violations

7 | Federal per diem rates stay flat for

FY 2026

This is the first year in five that GSA has not raised

the rates

Survey: Hospitality drops most jobs in

June

The sector’s quit rates remain above the national

average

8 | Report: CMBS delinquency, CapEx

dip slowing recovery

Limited-service hotels are at particular risk if

trend continues

9 | CoStar, TE cut growth projections

on slowing demand

Forecast calls for stability as trade talks conclude,

BBB takes effect

10 | G6, THLA expand franchise

support in Texas

The company also is expanding its U.S. footprint

with Galaxy

11 | Peachtree’s FL development gets

EB-5 approval

It raised $47 million in construction financing for

the project

15 | More than 900 attend LendingCon

2025

Speakers addressed impact of tariffs on the economy

25 | The business of lobby retail

Hotels add retail to drive revenue and serve guests

Gujarati translation of top stories begins on page 28

Gujarati translation of top stories begins on

page 29

On The Cover

Financial technology developers say

accounting software that is purpose-built

for hotels offers more complete service,

and brokers are using the technology to

improve hotel sales.

13 | Study: Brands, loyalty programs see

decade of growth

RevPAR grew 1.8 percent CAGR in 2019–2024 from

2014–2019

14 | Report: OYO eyes $7-8B IPO filing

in November

It plans a new parent brand identity to unify its

portfolio

India’s Prestige secures $325M IPO

approval

Marriott-managed keys make up 9 percent of the

group’s portfolio

COMING

NEXT ISSUE:

Finding time for family at Diwali

Contents

11

14

o6

10

15

18

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

Design

18 | Be smart about it

Inaugural LivSmart Studios opens in Tennessee

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Peace be with you

eace be with you.”

In a Catholic mass, there’s a point where the priest says

that to the congregation.

“And also with you,” the crowd replies.

Then they take a minute shaking hands, hugging and

wishing peace upon one another.

The wishing of peace is hardly limited to Catholicism. Muslims greet

each with “Assalamu Alaikum,” which means “Peace be upon you.”

Jews say “Shalom” and, of course, Hindu prayers often end with “Om

Shanti Shanti Shanti.”

Even the general areligious hippies greeted each other with “Peace,

man.” The peace sign was the icon of that movement.

In the center of Hiroshima in Japan, the first city burned to its

foundations with atomic fire, there is Heiwa Kinen Koen, “Peace

Memorial Park.” Been there, beautiful place.

Peace is what we all hope to rest in at the end of our lives. Sadly, that

seems to be because it’s such a rare commodity here on Earth.

Gaza. Ukraine. Jammu and Kashmir.

Need I say more?

The real tragedy here, of course, is that we can all have this thing

we so desire in an instant. It’s only a wish away, or more precisely, a

decision away.

We have to choose peace, not wish for it. That seems to be the

problem.

We’re not like Star Trek’s Vulcans (who greet each other with the

famous salute “Live long and prosper” with the response “Peace and

long life”), we’re not ruled by logic. We’re creatures of emotion, and we

too often let those passions overwhelm us.

Well, at least we’re trying, I guess. Maybe, one day, we’ll succeed.

Edward J. Brock, Senior Editor

[email protected]

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Editor's Letter

04

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

05

News

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

resident Donald Trump’s 50 percent

tariff on Indian goods took effect

Aug. 27, while Prime Minister

Narendra Modi urged citizens to follow

the “Vocal for Local” policy and Swadeshi

mantra in his Aug. 15 Independence Day

address. Beyond exports such as textiles,

the U.S. measure is likely to affect travel,

tourism and hospitality in both countries.

Goods imports from India were $87.3

billion in 2024, up 4.5 percent, or $3.8

billion, from 2023, according to the U.S.

Trade Representative.

The Global Trade Research Initiative

told the Financial Times that Indian

exports to the U.S. could fall from $86.5

billion this year to about $50 billion in

2026. Textiles, gems, jewelry, shrimp and

carpets are expected to be most affected,

with exports in these sectors projected to

drop 70 percent, “endangering hundreds

of thousands of jobs.”

Meanwhile, India also began outreach

programs in 40 markets, including the

UK, Japan and South Korea, to increase

textile exports, Economic Times reported.

Officials said 40 select markets, including

the UK, Japan, South Korea, Germany,

France and Australia, “hold the real key to

diversification.” These countries import

more than $590 billion in textiles and

apparel annually, while India’s current

share is around 5 to 6 percent.

Trade embargo

The duties, 16 percentage points higher

than China, 31 points higher than most

Southeast Asian countries and 35 points

above South Korea, have raised U.S.

tariffs on Indian goods to levels Nomura

described as a “trade embargo,” the

Guardian reported.

However, the U.S. hotel associations,

including the AAHOA and the American

Hotel & Lodging Association, have not

commented, though the tariffs raise

costs for imported furniture, textiles and

kitchen supplies. Higher costs may also

increase guest prices, delay renovations

and reduce profitability.

The tariff increase may also affect U.S.

companies operating in India, including

Hilton Hotels & Resorts, Marriott

International, Wyndham Hotels & Resorts

and Choice Hotels International, all of

which have announced expansion plans.

Tesla recently opened an outlet in Mumbai.

‘Vocal for Local’

Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged

traders and shopkeepers to follow the

“Vocal for Local” mantra and buy Indian

products, saying this will keep money

within India, The Hindu reported.

“Have faith in Indian goods. If you

are Indian, buy only goods made in

India. Choose items made in India, by

Indians,” he said at an event in Delhi. “I

want to appeal to my fellow traders and

shopkeepers: support me in following the

mantra of ‘Vocal for Local’. This will benefit

the country and the money spent on the

goods you sell will stay within India.”

On Independence Day, Modi emphasised

self-reliance under Atmanirbhar Bharat

across defence and energy, with initiatives

in solar, hydrogen and nuclear power.

He announced a Reform Task Force to

boost economic growth, reduce red tape,

modernise governance and prepare India

for a $10 trillion economy by 2047.

Indian Member of Parliament Manickam

Tagore criticised Modi over the “Howdy

Modi” event, Modi’s meeting with Trump

during the president’s first term, saying

India has suffered export losses after the

U.S. imposed the double tariff.

“Modiji, remember your slogan ‘Abki

Baar, Trump Sarkar’?” he wrote on X.

“Today, that ‘friendship’ has cost India

Rs 2.17 lakh crore in export losses as the

U.S. imposes a 50 percent tariff. Your PR

politics = India’s economic disaster.”

Tagore said farmers, MSMEs and

exporters are bearing the brunt.

“Textile exports from Tiruppur, Surat,

and Noida face 5 lakh job losses; the gems

and jewellery sector is losing 2 lakh jobs;

3 million livelihoods of Andhra Pradesh

shrimp farmers are at risk,” he said. “All

due to Modi’s failed diplomacy and slogans

abroad.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent

described the India-U.S. relationship as

“very complicated” but expressed hope

that “at the end of the day, we will come

together.”

Trump’s tariff shock,

Modi’s swadeshi call

U.S. imposes 50 percent tariff on India, threatening economic outlook

President Donald Trump’s 50 percent tariff on Indian goods took effect Aug. 27, affecting trade

worth billions of dollars.

News

06

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

he Trump administration is

reviewing more than 55 million

people who hold valid U.S. visas for

potential violations. It also plans to replace

the H-1B lottery with a wage-based system

favoring higher-paid applicants.

The State Department confirmed all

visa holders are subject to ongoing review,

which includes checking for overstays,

criminal activity, threats to public safety

or ties to terrorism. Should violations

be found, visas may be revoked, and

holders in the U.S. could face deportation,

according to the Associated Press.

Officials said the reviews will include

monitoring of visa holders’ social media

accounts, law enforcement records and

immigration files. New rules also require

applicants to disable privacy settings

on phones and apps during interviews.

The department noted visa revocations

since President Trump’s return to office

have more than doubled compared to the

previous year, including nearly four times

as many student visas.

The administration also announced an

immediate halt on issuing worker visas

for foreign commercial truck drivers,

with Secretary of State Marco Rubio citing

road safety and competition concerns for

U.S. truckers.

“The increasing number of foreign

drivers operating large tractor-trailer

trucks on U.S. roads is endangering

American lives and undercutting the

livelihoods of American truckers,” Rubio

posted on X.

The Transportation Department

linked the move to recent enforcement

of English-language proficiency

requirements for truckers, aimed at

improving safety. The State Department

later said it was pausing visa processing

while it reviewed screening protocols.

Critics, including Edward Alden of the

Council on Foreign Relations, warned the

actions could have significant economic

consequences.

“The goal here is not to target specific

classes of workers, but to send the

message to American employers that

they are at risk if they are employing

foreign workers,” Alden wrote, according

to AP.

Data from the Department of

Homeland Security shows there are 12.8

million green card holders and 3.6 million

temporary visa holders in the United

States. The 55 million figure under review

includes many outside the U.S. with valid

multiple-entry tourist visas.

The State Department recently

reported revoking more than 6,000

student visas for violations since Trump

returned to office, including around 200

to 300 for terrorism-related issues.

The vast majority of foreign visitors

require visas to enter the U.S., with

exceptions granted to citizens of 40

countries under the Visa Waiver Program,

primarily in Europe and Asia. Citizens of

China, India, Russia and most of Africa

remain subject to visa requirements.

Shifting H-1Bs, green cards

to wage-based system

The U.S. Office of Information and

Regulatory Affairs approved a draft

rule in August outlining the proposed

changes to the H-1B and green card

systems, according to Bloomberg Law.

The H-1B program is capped at 65,000

visas annually, with an additional 20,000

reserved for U.S. advanced degree holders,

according to the U.S. Citizenship and

Immigration Services.

During the first Trump administration,

DHS proposed replacing the H-1B lottery

with a wage-based system that would

rank petitions in four wage tiers, giving

priority to higher-paid jobs, under the

“Buy American, Hire American” policy,

according to the Federal Register.

“We’re going to change the green card,”

Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick

told Fox News, according to Economic

Times. “The average American makes

$75,000 a year, while the average green

card recipient makes $66,000. Why are

we doing that? It’s like picking the bottom

tier.”

According to the U.S. Social Security

Administration, the average U.S. salary

for 2023, its latest National Average Wage

Index, was $66,621.80.

Trump reviewing 55

million visas

More than 6,000 student visas revoked this year for violations

The Trump administration is reviewing 55 million visas for violations. More than twice as many

visas than usual have been revoked since President Trump returned to office.

07

News

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

he U.S. General Services

Administration will keep

standard per diem rates for

federal travelers at 2025 levels for fiscal

year 2026. The American Hotel and

Lodging Association raised concerns

that the decision affects government

travel, a key economic driver for the

hotel industry.

The standard lodging rate remains

$110 and the meals and incidental

allowance is $68 for fiscal year 2026,

unchanged from 2025, GSA said in a

statement.

“Government travel is a vital

economic driver for the hotel industry

and the broader travel economy,” said

Rosanna Maietta, AHLA’s president

and CEO. “That’s why it’s so important

for government per diem rates to

keep pace with rising costs across the

economy. The GSA’s decision to keep

per diem rates flat will place a strain

on the hospitality industry as well as

government travelers seeking lodging.

A strong economy requires a thriving

hospitality sector. We will continue to

advocate with the GSA and members of

Congress for per diem rates that reflect

hotels’ rising costs of doing business.”

GSA sets per diem rates to reimburse

federal employees’ lodging and meal

expenses for official travel within the

continental U.S., based on the trailing

12-month ADR for lodging and meals

minus 5 percent. This is the first year in

five that GSA has not raised the rates.

The federal administration said

the decision reflects the federal

government’s commitment to using

taxpayer funds appropriately and for

core mission activities. The steady per

diem rates are enabled by the reduction

in inflationary pressures from the

previous administration.

“GSA's decision ensures cost-

effective travel reimbursement while

supporting the mission-critical

mobility of the federal workforce,” said

Larry Allen, associate administrator, GSA

Office of Government-wide Policy.

The rate applies to federal travelers

and those on government-contracted

business for all U.S. locations not

designated as “non-standard areas,”

which have higher per diems. For fiscal

year 2026, GSA will keep the number of

non-standard areas at 296, unchanged

from 2025.

Federal per diem rates stay

flat for FY 2026

This is the first year in five that GSA has not raised the rates

The U.S. General Services Administration will keep

standard per diem rates flat for federal travelers in

fiscal year 2026.

he hospitality sector saw

the largest decline in job

openings of any industry

in June, according to the U.S.

Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Accommodation and food services

fell by 308,000 positions from the

previous month.

The “BLS Job Openings and

Labor Turnover Survey” found

the drop occurred despite

overall U.S. openings holding at

7.4 million, a 4.4 percent rate.

The hospitality category, which

includes accommodation and

food services, has been a major

driver of labor demand in recent

years but continues to face

volatility in hiring needs and high

turnover.

Nationally, the number of quits

remained unchanged at 3.1 million, a 2

percent rate, the report said. However,

hospitality continues to experience quit

rates well above the national average,

reflecting persistent retention

challenges.

While industries such as

retail trade and information saw

increases in openings in June,

the contraction in hospitality

suggests a recalibration in staffing

needs ahead of the second half

of 2025. The next JOLTS report,

covering July 2025, will be

released on September 3 and will

indicate whether the downturn in

hospitality job openings is a short-

term adjustment or the start of a

longer trend.

A survey by Expert Market found

48 percent of accommodation

businesses view staffing as their

top risk for the year, followed by labor

costs at 34 percent and maintenance at

27 percent.

Survey: Hospitality drops most jobs in June

The sector’s quit rates remain above the national average

The hospitality sector dropped the most job openings in June,

down 308,000, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

News

08

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

ommercial mortgage backed

securities continue to see higher

delinquency rates despite some

recovery after the COVID pandemic,

with different hotel segments facing

different challenges, according to a

report by Trepp data and analytics firm.

The report also found that a decline

in capital expenditures is leading to

devaluation of hotel assets.

In 2020, delinquencies for lodging

sector CMBS spiked at 19.78 percent, up

from 1.51 percent a year before. Trepp’s

report breaks down that overall trend

and the post COVID recovery according

to their impact on the limited-

service, full-service and extended stay

segments.

Fighting deterioration

The Trepp report said investors

have grown concerned about a

decline in CapEx since the pandemic,

particularly in the limited-service hotel

segment. The result has been visible

deterioration in asset quality, meaning

many properties may be underinvesting

in upkeep, renovations and necessary

upgrades.

“Before the pandemic, the majority

of properties were spending within

a relatively healthy range of $750 to

$2,000 per key, with just 8 to 9 percent

falling below the $750 threshold

annually,” the report said. “High

spenders (more than $2,000 per key)

represented a modest but steady share,

ranging between 10 to 12 percent from

2017 to 2019.”

That CapEx investment stopped in

2020 and the share of properties with

CapEx below $750 per key jumped to 54

percent. Only 3 percent of properties

were spending more than $2,000 per

key on improvements as the pandemic

led hotel owners to defer capital

projects.

“Post-2020, one might have expected

a meaningful rebound in spending – a

‘catch-up’ period to address deferred

maintenance and bring assets back up

to brand or investor standards. But the

data suggest otherwise,” the report

said.

By 2024, the share of properties

spending less than $750 per key on

CapEx dropped to 6 percent. Trepp

said 13 to 16 percent were in the high-

spending range, roughly the same as

pre-pandemic levels.

“The middle tier ($750-$2,000 per

key) has absorbed the shift, maintaining

a roughly 77 to 78 percent share since

2021, suggesting that owners are

opting for moderate upgrades, but

not investing aggressively enough to

reverse the cumulative effects of 2020's

pause,” the report said.

Not in the clear yet

Despite some signs of recovery in lower

delinquency rates for full-service and

extended-stay hotels, the fact that the

rates remain high for limited-service

properties, combined with reduced

CapEx spending, mean the market is

recovering unevenly, Trepp’s report

said. The limited-service segment in

particular remains at risk for functional

obsolescence and brand erosion.

“As investors and lenders assess

lodging-backed CMBS exposure in

the current market environment,

headline delinquency rates should

be interpreted with caution,” the

report said. “Beneath the surface,

capital health and reinvestment trends

may offer a more accurate lens into

long-term asset viability. If capital

discipline does not return to pre-

pandemic norms, the sector could face

another wave of stress – one driven

not by occupancy or cash flow, but by

deteriorating physical infrastructure

and declining borrower resilience.”

Report: CMBS delinquency,

CapEx dip slowing recovery

Limited-service hotels are at particular risk if trend continues

Higher delinquency rates for commercial mortgage backed securities and a dip in CapEx spending

are slowing the recovery, according to a report by Trepp data and analytics firm.

09

News

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

oStar and Tourism Economics lowered U.S. hotel growth

projections for 2025 and 2026, citing reduced demand

from uncertainty, inflation, year-over-year

comparisons and shifting travel patterns. The economic

outlook is expected to remain stable, with hotel

performance likely to recover as trade talks conclude

and the Big Beautiful Bill Act takes effect.

The forecast released at the 17th Annual Hotel Data

Conference lowered 2025 growth projections—demand

by 0.6 points, ADR by 0.5 and RevPAR by 1.1—citing

underperformance and macroeconomic conditions.

Similar revisions were made for 2026, with demand

down 0.5 points, ADR 0.3 and RevPAR 0.7.

“Unrelenting uncertainty and inflation, coupled with

tough calendar comps and changing travel patterns,

have caused lower demand,” said Amanda Hite, STR

president. “Additionally, as the year has unfolded, we’ve

seen rate growth converge closer with demand. We

expect little change in the economic outlook over the

next 18 months, but we are optimistic that once trade

talks have concluded and the impact of the budget

reconciliation bill comes to fruition, hotel performance

will recover.”

Aryan Ryan, director of industry studies at TE, said

the slowing U.S. economy should absorb tariff impacts

without entering a recession.

“The current environment—characterized by slowing

consumer spending, reduced business capital spending

and declining international visitation—will transition

to one boosted moderately by tax cuts and less policy

uncertainty as we look to 2026,” he said.

“While our GOPPAR forecast remains unchanged

from the previous revision, GOP margins were revised

down 0.3ppts for 2025 and 2.3ppts for 2026, mainly due

to a potential increase in expenses, particularly F&B,”

Hite said.

In June, CoStar and TE lowered 2025–26 U.S.

hotel growth projections due to first-quarter

underperformance and macroeconomic factors,

revising supply down 0.1 percent, demand 0.6 percent, ADR 0.3

percent and RevPAR 0.8 percent.

CoStar, TE cut growth projections

on slowing demand

Forecast calls for stability as trade talks conclude, BBB takes effect

CoStar and Tourism Economics cut their 2025–26 U.S. hotel

growth projections due to reduced demand.

long-term stability but

not long-term contracts

“ I enjoy dealing with a stable company

that provides clear brand direction,

equitable contracts, flexible standards,

and the lowest fees in the industry.”

This is not an offering. Federal laws and regulations and the laws and regulations of some states and provinces regulate the offer and sale of franchises. An offering

will only be made in compliance with those laws and regulations, which may require that we provide you with a disclosure statement. © 2025 Hospitality International

800-892-8405 • hifranchise.com • [email protected]

delivers

Jaimesh Patel

Owner & hihotels Advisory Council member

Red Carpet Inn, Gibbstown, NJ

Joined brand in 2018

News

10

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

6 Hospitality, parent

of Motel 6 and Studio

6, recently joined

the Texas Hotel & Lodging

Association to expand a

statewide coalition on

advocacy, public safety and

market growth for its Texas

franchisees. Also, G6 and

Galaxy Hotels Group are now

expanding the Motel 6 and

Studio 6 footprint in the U.S.

with 10 Galaxy-managed

hotels, totaling more than

1,300 rooms with more to

follow.

The company brings an

economy-brand perspective

to discussions that influence

policy, operations and guest

experience across the state.

The two will co-host

workshops, forums and

tech showcases to support

market education, best-

practice sharing and talent

development statewide, the duo said in

a statement.

“As we join THLA, our goal is to

contribute to a stronger Texas lodging

ecosystem—advocating smart policy,

elevating safety and guest experience

and providing collaborative learning

opportunities for our franchisees and

employees statewide,” said Sonal Sinha,

G6 Hospitality's CEO. “We’re proud

to add our voice and scale to THLA’s

efforts while equipping our franchisees

with Texas-specific resources to

operate confidently and grow.”

The company will support discussions

on competition, consumer protection,

tourism promotion and workforce

initiatives for independent and branded

hotels, the statement said. OYO CEO

Ritesh Agarwal is chair of G6 Hospitality.

“G6 Hospitality’s membership

strengthens our initiatives that help

advance Texas hotels," said Scott Joslove,

THLA's president and CEO. "Their

reach in the economy segment brings

valuable insights to policy development,

workforce initiatives and community

safety programs that benefit properties

in every market and price point."

THLA works with state and local

leaders to promote business growth,

protect consumers, and support hotels

with legal guidance, policy insights

and education, the statement said. The

association will provide Texas-specific

compliance and operations training for

G6 owners and teams alongside G6’s

standards.

G6 and Galaxy

expansion

G6 brands consistently outperform

others in guest satisfaction and value,

said Galaxy, which rejoined the G6

network after a short break. Texas-

based Galaxy was founded in 1999 and

led by CEO Jagmohan “Jag” Dhillon,

operates more than 41 hotels in the U.S.

“This partnership marks a new

chapter in our mission to deliver

modern, value-driven hospitality, as

we now proudly rejoin G6 Hospitality,"

said Carlos Cuevas, Galaxy Hotels' COO.

"Having previously moved from Choice

Group/Park Inn by Radisson, we’ve

closely compared the performance of

various franchises. Our experience and

data show that G6 brands consistently

outperform others in guest satisfaction

and value. This is why we’re back."

Recent additions include Studio 6

Suites Las Vegas with 308 rooms, Motel

6 Las Vegas – I-15 Stadium with 139

rooms and Motel 6 Las Vegas – Boulder

Highway with 160 rooms, the companies

said. Studio 6 Suites Las Vegas on the

Strip, with more than 300 rooms, will

be one of the largest Studio 6 hotels in

the U.S., while Motel 6 Las Vegas is also

near the Strip and Allegiant Stadium.

The portfolio also includes Motel 6

hotels in Modesto, San Jose and Santa

Rosa, California and Lakewood, Fort

Collins, Thornton and Colorado Springs,

Colorado.

G6, THLA expand franchise

support in Texas

The company also is expanding its U.S. footprint with Galaxy

G6 Hospitality and the Texas Hotel & Lodging Association will support advocacy, workforce development and tourism

promotion for Texas hotels.

11

News

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

Peachtree’s FL development

gets EB-5 approval

It raised $47 million in construction financing for the project

eachtree Group recently secured

EB-5 approval from Citizenship

and Immigration Services

for Madison Bradenton, a 240-unit

multifamily development in Bradenton,

Florida. It also raised $47 million in

construction financing with a four-year

term for the project on a 10.7-acre site

in Manatee County.

The approval allows the company to

advance its EB-5 Immigrant Investor

Program, which directs foreign

investment to U.S. job creation,

Peachtree said in a statement.

“Madison Bradenton reflects the

strong demand for high-quality

multifamily housing in growing

markets,” said Adam Greene,

Peachtree’s executive vice president

of EB-5. “This project underscores

our ability to pair EB-5 financing with

secured lending, delivering attractive

opportunities for investors while

meeting critical housing needs.”

The project will include five four-

story apartment buildings with

elevators, a two-story carriage

building and a clubhouse, with

residences averaging 1,027 square

feet and featuring private patios or

balconies. The location provides access

to employment centers, healthcare

facilities and Siesta Key Beach.

Atlanta-based Peachtree is led by

Greg Friedman, managing principal and

CEO; Jatin Desai, managing principal

and CFO and Mitul Patel, principal.

This is Peachtree’s fourth approved

I-956F application, following projects

such as Home2 Suites by Hilton in

Boone, North Carolina; SpringHill

Suites by Marriott in Bryce Canyon,

Utah and TownePlace Suites by

Marriott in Palmdale, California. In

May, Peachtree secured USCIS approval

for four regional centers—South,

Northeast, Midwest and West—allowing

it to sponsor EB-5 projects in those

territories.

The EB-5 visa program allows

foreign investors to obtain a green

card by investing in a U.S. commercial

enterprise that creates

jobs, the statement said.

Investors who contribute

at least $800,000 to a

project that creates or

preserves 10 full-time

jobs for U.S. workers are

eligible for permanent

residency.

In July, Peachtree

launched the $250 million

Special Situations Fund

to invest in hotel and

commercial real estate

assets affected by capital

market illiquidity. The

fund targets properties

with value-add potential

while limiting downside

risk and is positioned to

step in where traditional

capital has pulled back,

as nearly $1 trillion in

commercial real estate

loans mature in 2025 and

hotels face refinancing and

capital needs, Peachtree

said in a statement.

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Peachtree Group secured

EB-5 approval for Madison

Bradenton, a 240-unit

multifamily development in

Bradenton, Florida.

Openings & Aquisitions

12

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

Openings

The Element by Westin Wilmington in Wilmington, North Carolina,

139 rooms, Aug. 12. The hotel was jointly developed by Vision Hospitality

Group, led by Founder and CEO Mitch Patel, and CBL & Associates. It

is in Wilmington’s Mayfair Town Center is near Wrightsville Beach and

downtown, the statement said. It has a 24/7 fitness center, indoor-outdoor

lobby bar, pool, electric vehicle charging stations, and complimentary bike

rentals.

Embassy Suites by Hilton Gulf Shores Beach Resort in Gulf

Shores, Alabama, 257 rooms, July 28. The eight-story, all-suite hotel was

developed by Peachtree Group, led by Friedman, CFO and Managing

Principal Jatin Desai and Principal Mitul Patel, along with Woodbine

Development Corp. and DD Partners LLC. The hotel includes 13,620

square feet of meeting and pre-function space, including a 7,800-square-

foot ballroom with Gulf views for conferences, weddings and events. It

also features a three-story parking garage and more than 7,600 square

feet of retail space.

Renovations

Red Roof Inn in Washington, D.C., 53 rooms, Aug. 4. The newly

renovated, pet-friendly hotel is owned by Gopal Inc., led by President Anil

Patel. It is near Union Station, the U.S. Capitol, the Library of Congress,

the National Mall, the White House and Gallaudet University.

The Ava Hotel, part of Hilton’s Curio

Collection, is now open in Paso Robles,

California. The 151-room, four-story

hotel is owned by Peachtree Group and

Paso Robles Hotel Partners.

San Diego-based Azul Hospitality,

led by President Mark Crisci and CEO

Alvaro Fraile, will manage the hotel, the

companies said in a statement.

“The Ava Hotel is both a destina­

tion and a gathering place for Paso

Robles,” said Matt Kleefisch, The Ava

Hotel’s GM. “Every detail—from the

design-forward accommodations to the

ingredient-driven menus at EMRE—

reflects the warmth, creativity and

hospitality that make Paso so special.

We wanted to create a place where travelers

can immerse themselves in the Central Coast

and where locals want to gather. By blending

elevated dining, social spaces and design that

celebrates the region’s character, The Ava

Hotel spotlights Paso Robles as a destination

for every kind of guest.”

Atlanta-based Peachtree, is led by Greg

Friedman, managing principal and CEO, Jatin

Desai, managing principal and CFO, and Mitul

Patel, principal. Paso Robles Hotel

Partners is a joint venture between

Peachtree and Verakin Capital, a San

Mateo firm led by Rupesh Patel, Bimal

Patel and Hiten Suraj.

Moore 2 Design developed the ho­

tel’s the interior design, the statement

said. Pegasus Architects created the

exterior façade and Arris Studio Archi­

tects produced the construction draw­

ings. Studio Sinclair and HBA designed

the property to reflect Paso Robles’

heritage and growth as a cultural and

culinary destination.

The hotel offers standard rooms—

single king, double queen and double

king—and upgraded rooms with Juliet

balconies or pool patio decks with direct ac­

cess to the rooftop saltwater pool. One-bed­

room and double queen suites include 1.5

bathrooms and living areas with fireplaces,

powder rooms and sofa sleepers.

News

13

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

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otel companies grew brand

portfolios and loyalty programs

over the past decade, according

to CBRE. RevPAR grew as well, though

inflation cut into profits.

The number of brands increased at 7

percent compound annual growth rate

during the last 10 years, while loyalty

program memberships rose 15 percent,

according to CBRE’s “Hotel Brand

Performance 2025.” Brand families

including Choice, Hilton, Hyatt,

IHG Hotels & Resorts, Marriott, and

Wyndham doubled their portfolios to

an average of 24 brands each between

2014 and 2024.

CBRE found that adding brands has

not consistently driven higher RevPAR

growth since 2019, as the fastest-

growing brand family by number

of brands, with a 15 percent CAGR,

recorded the lowest median RevPAR

CAGR at 0.3 percent.

Brand proliferation may increase

loyalty membership but can correlate

negatively with RevPAR within the

same family, the report said. Some

additions, such as glamping or all-

inclusive resorts, expand redemption

options for loyalty points valued

at more than $12 billion. Others,

including middle-tier conversion and

extended-stay brands, grew more than

40 percent in the past five years and

may cannibalize existing properties.

RevPAR growth and

inflation

RevPAR grew at a 1.8 percent CAGR

from 2019 to 2024, 20 basis points

above 2014–2019, while inflation rose

from 1.6 percent to 4.2 percent, eroding

real gains. Since 2019, nominal RevPAR

increased 9.3 percent but fell 10.9

percent in real terms as alternative

lodging supply and hotel inventory

growth outpaced demand, reducing

pricing power across segments.

Around 52 percent of

brands posted RevPAR

gains above the sample

CAGR average of 1.6

percent from 2014 to

2019. However, since

2019, 28 percent have

exceeded the 1.8 percent

average.

The gap between the

strongest and weakest

brands has widened

across chain scales, with

the luxury segment’s

RevPAR spread rising to

nearly seven percentage

points in 2019 to 2024

from five points in 2014 to 2019. The

strongest luxury brand’s cumulative

RevPAR premium rose to 41 percent

from 29 percent over the same periods,

indicating greater performance

variability within segments, CBRE said.

Upper-midscale hotels have

increased at a 5.8 percent CAGR since

2015, supporting demand stability. They

recorded the highest RevPAR CAGR

of any chain scale at 2.2 percent from

2014 to 2019 and 2.3 percent from 2019

to 2024. Midscale and economy chains

recorded the slowest RevPAR growth

from 2019 to 2024, with declines of 3.2

percent and 1.9 percent, respectively.

Study: Brands, loyalty programs

see decade of growth

RevPAR grew 1.8 percent CAGR in 2019–2024 from 2014–2019

Major hotel companies grew brand portfolios at a 7 percent CAGR and loyalty

program memberships at 15 percent over the past decade, according to CBRE.

14

India News

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

YO is reportedly planning to file its

Draft Red Herring Prospectus in

November for an IPO targeting a

$7 to 8 billion valuation. The company will

present the proposal to its board next week.

Discussions with banking partners have

increased in recent weeks, with valuation

guidance at $7 to 8 billion, or 25 to 30 times

EBITDA, Press Trust of India reported

citing sources.

"While we cannot comment on any

timelines related to OYO's DRHP or IPO

plans, as these will be guided by OYO's

board of directors and remain at their

discretion, OYO continues to evaluate a

range of strategic options to drive value for

its stakeholders," a company spokesperson

told PTI.

In May, OYO delayed its third IPO

attempt due to opposition from its largest

shareholder, SoftBank, and market

volatility.

“Over the past few months, SoftBank

has engaged with banks such as Axis,

Citi, Goldman Sachs, ICICI, JM Financial

and Jefferies in London to assess market

sentiment. After assessing market feedback,

they are now confident in their decision,”

one person aware of the developments

was quoted as saying. “The board will be

approached next week as the company

firms up the details and finalises key

strategic elements."

SoftBank remains one of OYO's largest

shareholders. Insiders indicate the

filing will showcase OYO's first-quarter

financial performance, the report said. The

hospitality industry also saw double-digit

growth this quarter.

OYO is planning a new parent brand

identity to unify its portfolio. Earlier this

year, OYO CEO Ritesh Agarwal asked for

name suggestions for Oravel Stays Ltd

on social media. The chosen name may

become the group's new name. OYO is also

exploring a separate app for its premium

and mid-to-premium company-serviced

hotels, as the segment has grown across

India and global markets.

OYO added more than 150 hotels to its

U.S. portfolio in the first half of 2025 and

plans 150 more by year-end.

Report: OYO eyes $7-8B IPO

filing in November

It plans a new parent brand identity to unify its portfolio

restige Hospitality Ventures

recently received Securities

and Exchange Board of India

approval for a $325 million initial

public offering. The company

develops and operates luxury to upper

midscale hospitality assets and is part

of Bengaluru-based Prestige Group,

promoted by Prestige Estates Projects.

The offer comprises a $205 million

fresh issue of shares and an offer

for sale of up to $120 million by

promoters Prestige Estates Projects,

Economic Times reported.

Prestige Hospitality Ventures, led

by CEO Suresh Singaravelu, plans to

use $135 million from the fresh issue to

repay $48 million in debt incurred by

itself and its subsidiaries, Sai Chakra

Hotels and Northland Holding Co.,

while reinvesting $87 million into these

subsidiaries.

Additional funds will support

growth through acquisitions, strategic

initiatives and general corporate

purposes, the Times said.

As of December 2024, its portfolio

included seven hotels with 1,445

keys—1,255 operating and 190 under

renovation. It also has three ongoing

projects with 951 keys and nine planned

projects adding 1,558 rooms, making it

the largest hotel chain in South India.

The portfolio spans Bengaluru, Delhi-

NCR, Mumbai, Goa, Hyderabad and

Chennai, covering convention centers,

business hotels, extended stay

residences and golf resorts.

The company operates hotels

under several Marriott International

brands—St. Regis, Edition, W Hotels,

JW Marriott, Marriott Marquis,

Sheraton, Autograph Collection,

Tribute Portfolio, Moxy, Aloft and

Marriott Executive Apartments—as

well as Conrad by Hilton and Angsana

Resorts & Spa by Banyan Tree.

Marriott-managed keys account for

nine percent of the group’s portfolio,

the largest share under any brand.

Meanwhile, revenue from hospitality

services rose to $96 million in the

previous fiscal year, up from $77 million

in fiscal 2023.

Prestige is adding 2,509 rooms

through ongoing and upcoming projects,

including three ongoing projects with 951

keys and nine planned projects with 1,558

keys across seven Indian cities.

India’s Prestige secures $325M IPO approval

Marriott-managed keys make up 9 percent of the group’s portfolio

OYO plans to file its Draft Red Herring

Prospectus in November for a $7 to 8 billion IPO,

according to Press Trust of India.

India’s Prestige Hospitality Ventures recently secured

Sebi approval for a $325 million initial public offering.

pproximately 950 people attended

LendingCon 2025 Aug. 19 to 20

at Renaissance Seaworld hotel

in Orlando, Florida, more than the 800

organizers had expected. Attendees

heard from economists and members of

Congress about the current state of the

economy.

It was the fifth year for the conference,

founded in 2021 by Jan Gautam, president

and CEO of IHRMC Hotels & Resorts, to

give hoteliers more access to financing

options.

Along with a variety of educational

sessions and networking opportunities,

attendees at LendingCon 2025 heard

reports on the current economic

dynamics from experts from CoStar and

Oxford Economics. Those forecasts were

mostly concerned with the slowing of the

economy under President Trump’s tariffs

and immigration policies.

This year’s event will include keynote

speakers, panel discussions, one-on-

one meetings, and exhibitions. It will

provide a platform to discuss lending

and development practices and invite

professionals from banks, fintech

companies, credit unions, regulators,

investors, developers, consultants and

policymakers.

“We are reshaping lending, making

it simpler, more accessible, so you

can unlock new opportunities with

confidence,” Gautam said. “Last year,

lenders free networking session sparked

the real momentum. Deals were made

right on the conference floor.”

Follow the money

Past AAHOA Chairman Vinay Patel, who is

president and CEO of Fairbrook Hotels in

Herndon, Virginia, emceed the welcoming

session of the conference. He explained

the importance of LendingCon.

“We all need money to develop, to grow,

to build, to buy, to whatever else we do

in our businesses, we need money,” Patel

said. “That's what fuels the growth that

we have out here. And what better place to

be than at a conference where you meet a

lot of different vendors.”

Gautam stressed the event’s

opportunities to network.

“Over the next two days, you will

hear from experts on market trends,

innovative loan programs, AI’s role in

hospitality, development, planning and

much more,” he said. “But the real power

of learning power lies in the connection

you make.”

The first expert speaker at the

conference was Daryl Cronk, senior

economist at Oxford Economics. He

began with addressing the state of the

labor market.

“That's been top of mind lately. The

most recent report was much weaker

than expected,” Cronk said. “Hiring has

slowed significantly, and in fact, hiring

is quite narrow right now. There's only

a couple industries that are really in

any meaningful way adding jobs. Most

industries are flat to slightly declining

in employment, so we've seen a big

slowdown in jobs.”

At the same time, Cronk said, the

unemployment rate has stayed around

4.2 percent. There have not been

many layoffs, but companies haven’t

been hiring, either, he said. There

may be a couple of reasons for the

stable unemployment rate, such as the

retirement of Baby Boomers and the

reduction in the immigrant component

of the labor force resulting from current

immigration policies.

“People aren't quitting their jobs, which

if you're the company owner, maybe

that is a good thing and means reduced

turnover. But we see that as a lack of

confidence in the labor market,” Cronk

said. “People are less inclined to quit

their job if they don't think they can find

another one fairly quickly, or if they're

worried about the economic outlook, they

may not want to be the newbie hired into

the company, the old expression of last

hired, first fired, if things go soft.”

Cronk said tariffs are impacting the

economy even if inflation has only just

begun to increase.

“The reality is that tariffs lead into

inflation with a lag. There's a lag to the

More than 900 attend

LendingCon 2025

Speakers addressed impact of tariffs on the economy

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

LendingCon ’25

15

Jan Gautam, president and CEO of IHRMC Hotels & Resorts and founder of LendingCon in Orlando,

Florida, welcomes attendees to the 2025 conference.

LendingCon ’25

16

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

effect, for example, in the first quarter

of this year, imports surged almost 50

percent as businesses imported their

goods ahead of the tariffs. Well, that meant

they could sit back and not import when

tariffs come into effect, at least for a little

while,” he said. “We've also seen suppliers

and importers absorb some of the tariff

costs, at least initially. Suppliers overseas,

they don't want to lose their customers, so

they're maybe being a little generous with

their pricing to offset some of it.”

These temporary measures can only

last for so long, Cronk said.

“We think that inflationary effects of

tariffs are just getting started and will

continue to be seen in greater effect over

the next three to four months,” he said.

“So yes, they are raising revenue, but

there's a lot of downsides to tariffs and

just a few examples, high prices.”

Another symptom of the economic

uncertainty, Cronk said, has been a

drop in consumer confidence. While

confidence went up for middle and upper

income households, he said, but for the

lowest third of household incomes in

the country, their consumer confidence

declined last month.

“[Lower income] households are the

ones that are most exposed to higher

prices and inflation. They're the ones

most worried about the labor market

and losing their jobs and the outlook

for the economy, and they remain quite

uncertain right now about the future, and

that is having an impact, in particular

on spending,” Cronk said. “The first six

months of this year, consumer spending

is basically flat. If you go back over

20 years, when did we see consumer

spending flat or down? The last two

recessions, so not a good correlation.

However, I will tell you we are not

forecasting a recession, but clearly the

economy has slowed as consumers have

lost confidence, as the labor market has

stalled out a little bit, and it's showing up

in consumer spending.”

Uncertainty leads

CoStar to trim back

expectations

Previously, CoStar and Tourism

Economics lowered U.S. hotel growth

projections for 2025 and 2026 in a release

issued at the 17th Annual Hotel Data

Conference in Nashville. They lowered

2025 growth projections—demand by

0.6 points, ADR by 0.5 and RevPAR

by 1.1—citing underperformance and

macroeconomic conditions. Similar

revisions were made for 2026, with

demand down 0.5 points, ADR 0.3 and

RevPAR 0.7.

Speaking at LendingCon, Chantal

Wu, CoStar’s senior director and

hospitality market analyst, explained

the reason for the downgraded

forecast.

“There's uncertainty, there is

tariffs, there is uncertainty on tariffs.

So, that's driving all of the forecast

change here,” Wu said. “This is

causing lower consumer sentiment,

causing reduced business travel

activities also reduced bookings.”

Wu went on to discuss market

activity in various cities. One factor

in all those markets impacting hotel

development is construction costs, she

said, which vary across the country, across

chain scales and across types of projects.

Economic cycles also have an impact.

“Especially right now, when we

have tariffs, you want to make sure

that you have contingency baked into

your budget,” Wu said. “You want to

make sure that you try to take out all

of the uncertainty and make putting

together the capital stack more than a

paper exercise. This is the whole reason

why we're all here, building industry

relationships, making new friends. You

want to make sure that you can tap into

professional resources who can help you

with equity, with debt.”

The word from

Washington

Other speakers at LendingCon included

Republican Congressman Barry

Loudermilk of Georgia and Democrat

Congressman Darren Soto of Florida.

Both gave their assessments of the

economy.

“Depending on which side you're

on, you can make this out to be the

greatest economy, the worst economy,

or somewhere in the middle of cautious

optimism. There does seem to be a lot

of unsettling things,” Soto said. “I don't

know if that's just the economy is shifting

in a way that we're not prepared for it,

or if things really are this unsettling,

or you just have an administration that

attempts to do a million different things

in a million different times, which does,

of course, create uncertainty.”

Loudermilk said Trump’s One Big

Beautiful Bill, passed in July made

permanent the income tax breaks from

Trump’s first administration. That will

give consumers more money to spend on

travel and hotels.

“When their pay check only meets their

basic necessities, of housing, of food and

utilities, etc., they don't have the excess

income to spend on non-necessary

items,” Loudermilk said. “Really, the

entirety of our economy rests on the

philosophy that we need to make sure

that your blue collar workers all the way

up through your executives have more

money at the end of the day, after they

pay their taxes, after they pay the utilities

and rent.”

Consumers also must be given the

confidence that they can spend that

additional money, he said. Otherwise,

they may just save it.

“We want people to save, but we want

them to have enough to save and have a

Chantal Wu, CoStar’s senior director and hospitality

market analyst, said hotel developers should consider

higher costs from tariffs in their plans.

Daryl Cronk, senior economist at Oxford

Economics, said they are not forecasting a

recession, but the economy is slowing due to

uncertainty about tariffs and other federal policies.

LendingCon ’25

17

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 240

little fun, to go out and spend the money,

buy a new car, buy some appliances, go to

Orlando, visit many of the parks that are

here,” Loudermilk said.

Congress also needs to help cut the cost

of businesses as well, he said.

“When we're not taxing overtime, there

is a built in incentive for your employees

that you already have to work more.

I mean, these are employees that are

already trained. They're already getting

the benefits. They're already on your

payroll. Now they have a real incentive to

work overtime, work extra time, which

could effectively cut your cost, but it also

improves morale,” Loudermilk said.

The Federal Reserve’s decision last

month to keep interest rates at around

4.5 percent also affects the hospitality

industry, Loudermilk said. He expects at

least a moderate reduction in the rates by

September.

“We need to have interest rates

to where businesses can invest. But

the other thing is, we've got to have

confidence that the economy is strong,

and by lowering the interest rates, I

believe it's going to give consumers more

confidence,” Loudermilk said.

Soto said Democrats have several

concerns about recent policy shifts

brought in by Trump and the Republican

controlled Congress.

“We have deep concerns about threats

to Obamacare, Medicaid, SNAP, Pell

Grants, clean energy, all these things that

a lot of us in Central

Florida hold dear,”

Soto said. “Where

it affects a lot of

the hotel industry

is employer-based

health care. When

you have a rise in

uninsured rates,

employer based

plans go through the

roof.”

He indicated

that that the

administration’s

immigration

crackdown is one

reason behind

negative jobs reports.

“Here in Florida, we have a million

people who are about to lose their legal

immigration status between Venezuelans,

Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and

others. They are legally here. They're

working right now, many of them in

our local hotels and tourism industry,

construction,” Soto said. “These are

things that believe me, it seems every

day we try to limit the tariffs and try to

have some sense in who's staying in the

country and who's leaving, but this is

going to be a challenge for tourism over

the next year or two, and we'll see how it

turns out.”

Soto received a “Legislative Hero”

award during the conference while

Loudermilk received the Governmental

Affairs Excellence Award. Atlanta-based

Peachtree Group, led by Managing

Principal and CEO Greg Friedman,

Managing Principal Jatin Desai and CFO

and Principal Mitul Patel, received the

Leadership in Hospitality Award.

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Speaking on a panel at LendingCon are, from left, past AAHOA Chairman Vinay

Patel, who is president and CEO of Fairbrook Hotels; Republican Congressman

Barry Loudermilk of Georgia; and Chip Rogers, former AAHOA president and

CEO, now CEO of Americans For Fair Treatment.

“We are reshaping lending, making

it simpler, more accessible, so you

can unlock new opportunities with

confidence.”

Jan Gautam, LendingCon founder and president and CEO of

IHRMC Hotels & Resorts

Hotel Design

18

ivSmart Studios by Hilton

Tullahoma, which opened in

July in Tullahoma, Tennessee,

is the new brand’s U.S.

premiere. The 89-room

property, developed by 3H Group and

Aztec Group, is the first location for the

brand.

The hotel is near the Beechcraft

Heritage Museum, Hands-On Science

Center and Short Springs State Natural

Area. It features apartment-like design

and a large guest laundry.

LivSmart was created to meet growing

demand for longer stays of 10 days or

more, said Isaac Lake, Hilton's brand

leader for the brand. As the brand

grows, Hilton plans to expand into

more markets with drivers for long-stay

hospitality.

“Opening the first LivSmart

Studios by Hilton is an important

moment for our team,” said Hiren

Desai, president and CEO of

Chattanooga, Tennessee- based

3H. “We’re partnering with Hilton

to launch this new brand and introduce

it to the Tullahoma community. This

hotel sets the foundation for what will

become a national option for long-stay

travelers and we’re contributing to the

brand’s growth.”

Hilton plans to open a second 137-room

LivSmart later this summer in Kokomo,

Indiana, which will be owned by Sun

Management & Development Corp.,

Hilton said in a statement. More than

90 hotels are expected to open in the

coming years, with more than 225 deals in

negotiation, the company said.

Be smart about it

Inaugural LivSmart Studios opens in Tennessee

3H Group and Aztec Group

opened the first LivSmart

Studios by Hilton in

Tullahoma, Tennessee.

The hotel has free grab and go

breakfast options, a retail space

with snacks and drinks, and a

dedicated takeout delivery zone.

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

Hotel Design

19

A door in the hotel leads to The

Southern Theatre, which is

currently owned and operated

as a home for live concerts,

plays and opera by the

Columbus Association for the

Performing Arts.

Claridge House,

designed by Chicago

architect Walter

Ahlschlager, first

opened in 1923 as the

Claridge Hotel.

Guests have

access to a

patio with

barbecue grills

and firepits.

www.asianhospitality.com

LivSmart Studios was

created to meet growing

demand for longer stays

of 10 days or more.

LivSmart

Studios by Hilton

Tullahoma

features

apartment-like

design and the

hotel has a large

guest laundry.

September 2025 | Issue 240

he complexities of the current

hotel market make it essential

that owners, managers and

investors have access to advanced

financial technology to help them get

the job done. It’s just as important that

they pick a fin tech platform tailored

to their needs, according to software

developers.

Companies such as M3, Reeco and

Nimble Accounting are providing focused

solutions for the hospitality industry. At

the same time, fin tech today is used for

more than just accounting. Brokers are

now using specialized software to market

properties for sale and to create feasibility

studies for new construction, conversion

and repositioning hotels.

Current advances in fin tech were

under discussion at the LendingCon

conference in Orlando in August (See p. 15

for more information on the conference).

The point of solutions provided by

companies such as Reeco, a two-year-old

startup that developed a procurement

app purpose built for hotels, is to enable

hotel owners to do more.

“We're always looking way to squeeze

more out of the leadership and the team

members at the hotel so that they can

do better things with their time, like

create value for owners and investors

by delivering great service, driving

revenues,” said James Hansen, Reeco’s

vice president of business development

efforts. “We give them the means to do

that.”

Purpose-built v.

all-purpose

One focus of modern fin tech development

is ease of use, Hansen said.

“We built a platform that mirrors very

much like your shopping or marketplace

experience at Amazon, where you as a

hotel operator, an owner or a management

company, you could go onto our platform

and pretty much type in any product,

anything you're searching for that you need

to operate your hotel on a daily, weekly or

monthly basis,” Hansen said. “Depending

on how often you place your orders, we've

really simplified that process through

AI and technology, automating a lot of

the processes for your hotel operators,

simplifying life.”

Joining Hansen at the breakout session

was Shane Middleton, channel alliances

Cover Story

20

General accounting apps

fall short, developers say

Tailor made fin tech

on the rise

www.asianhospitality.com

September 2025 | Issue 24

Financial technology is finding increasing usage by the hospitality industry, both in back-of-house operations and hotel sales transactions.

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