Chatham Lodging Trust Isn't Panicking. Neither Should You.
A junk-source headline screams "panic selling" about a lodging REIT that just bought six hotels, raised its dividend twice, and cut its debt by $70 million. The real story is what smart capital allocation looks like when everyone else is nervous.
I'm going to save you a click. There's an article bouncing around from a Vietnamese trade-volume site (no, really) with a headline asking whether Chatham Lodging Trust can "weather a recession" and invoking the phrase "panic selling." The source is not credible. The analysis is not there. And the conclusion is contradicted by virtually every move Chatham has made in the last six months. But the headline exists, and headlines travel, and I guarantee somebody's going to forward it to somebody who forwards it to an owner who gets nervous. So let's talk about what's actually happening.
Here's what Chatham actually did in the last year. They sold four older hotels for $71.4 million... at a 6% cap rate, which means they sold at a decent number, not a distressed number. They used that money to knock $70 million off their debt, dropping leverage from 23% to 20%. They bought back 1.8 million shares at an average of $6.87 because management thinks the stock is cheap (and at 7.3x adjusted FFO, they're probably right). Then in early March, they closed on six Hilton-branded hotels... 589 keys for $92 million, which works out to about $156,000 per key. And they bumped the dividend 11%. That's the second consecutive year of double-digit dividend increases. Does any of that sound like panic to you?
Look... I've been around lodging REITs long enough to know what actual distress looks like. I sat through 2009. I watched companies slash dividends, defer every dollar of CapEx, and pray the credit facility didn't get called. Distress is when you can't draw on your revolver. Chatham has a $300 million revolver with zero drawn on it. Distress is when your margins are collapsing. Chatham's hotel EBITDA margins went UP 70 basis points in Q4 despite RevPAR dropping nearly 2%. That's not panic. That's expense discipline from a team that knows how to manage through a soft patch. Their 2026 guidance is cautious... RevPAR somewhere between negative half a percent and positive one and a half... and honestly, cautious guidance from a REIT right now is a sign of adults running the show, not a sign of trouble.
The thing that actually matters here, the thing worth your attention, isn't whether Chatham can survive a recession. It's the playbook they're running. Sell older assets at reasonable cap rates before you HAVE to sell them. Use proceeds for debt reduction, not shiny new acquisitions at premium pricing. Buy your own stock when Mr. Market is being stupid about your valuation. Acquire selectively at $156K per key when others are paying $250K-plus for comparable product. Keep $300 million of dry powder untouched. That's what I'd call the opposite of panic. That's a company positioning itself so that IF a recession comes, they're the buyer, not the seller. I knew an owner once who told me his whole strategy was to be liquid when everyone else was leveraged. "Recessions are when you get rich," he said. "Expansions are when you prove you deserved to." Chatham looks like they've read that playbook.
The real lesson isn't about one REIT's balance sheet. It's about the noise. We are swimming in garbage content right now... AI-generated, SEO-optimized, financially illiterate content designed to generate clicks, not inform decisions. A headline that says "panic selling" about a company that's actively acquiring assets and raising dividends is not analysis. It's content pollution. And it gets dangerous when it reaches someone who doesn't have the context to know it's nonsense. Your job, whether you're an operator, an owner, or an asset manager, is to know the difference between signal and noise. This one was noise. The signal is in the earnings release, the acquisition announcement, and the balance sheet. Always has been.
If you're a GM or operator at a Chatham property, the signal from corporate is clear... they're investing, not retreating. That $26 million CapEx budget for 2026 (including renovations at three hotels starting Q4) means the company is spending on the portfolio, not stripping it. If your property is on the renovation list, start planning for disruption now, not when the contractors show up. If you're an operator at any lodging REIT and an owner forwards you a scary headline, this is the move: pull the actual earnings release, pull the debt maturity schedule, and bring YOUR read of the situation to the table before anyone asks. The operator who shows up with context before the panic call is the operator who looks like they're running the business.