DiamondRock's Preferred Stock Redemption Freed $9.8M a Year. That's the Move Worth Studying.
DiamondRock's 2025 capital recycling tells a cleaner story than its RevPAR guidance does. The $121.5 million preferred stock redemption eliminated a 8.25% annual cost of capital that most hotel REIT investors are still overlooking.
DiamondRock generated $297.6 million in adjusted EBITDA in 2025 and guided 2026 adjusted FFO per share to $1.09-$1.16. Those are the headline numbers. The number worth decomposing is $121.5 million... the cash used to redeem all 4.76 million shares of Series A preferred stock carrying an 8.25% coupon. That redemption eliminates $9.8 million in annual preferred dividends. At a blended cap rate somewhere near the 7.5% they achieved on the Westin DC disposition, that $9.8 million in freed cash flow is equivalent to acquiring roughly $130 million in hotel assets without buying a single property.
The Westin DC sale at $92 million ($224K per key, 11.2x on 2024 hotel EBITDA) funded part of this math. Selling a 410-room full-service asset in a market where group demand has been uneven post-pandemic, at a 7.5% cap rate on trailing NOI, is not a distressed exit. It's a deliberate trade... swap a lower-yielding urban asset for balance sheet flexibility. The 2025 share repurchase program ($37.1 million at an average of $7.72 per share) tells you management believes the stock is undervalued relative to the portfolio's intrinsic worth. When a REIT buys back stock below NAV while simultaneously eliminating high-cost preferred equity, the capital allocation thesis is coherent. That coherence is rarer than it should be.
The 2026 guidance is where it gets less interesting. RevPAR growth of 1.0%-3.0% with an EBITDA midpoint of $294.5 million represents a slight decline from 2025's $297.6 million. The company is essentially guiding flat EBITDA on modest top-line growth while planning $80-$90 million in annual CapEx (7%-9% of revenues). That CapEx number deserves scrutiny. At 95% independently managed properties, DiamondRock has operational flexibility most branded REITs don't. But $80-$90 million annually through a five-year plan is $400-$450 million in total capital deployed into existing assets. The question is whether renovation ROI at resort and urban lifestyle properties justifies that spend versus incremental acquisitions at current pricing.
I audited a portfolio once where the asset manager was proud of "capital recycling discipline." When I traced the math, the dispositions funded renovations that produced 6% unlevered returns while the sold assets were trading at 8% cap rates in the market. They were recycling capital downhill. DiamondRock's math runs the other direction... selling at 7.5% cap rates, eliminating 8.25% preferred equity, buying back stock below NAV. The direction of the recycling matters more than the activity itself.
Analyst targets clustering around $10.50-$10.75 with Hold ratings suggest the market sees exactly what's happening and has priced it in. The stock trades at roughly 9.5x the 2026 FFO midpoint. For a portfolio that's 60%+ leisure-oriented with nearly full independent management, that multiple reflects neither deep skepticism nor enthusiasm. It reflects a market waiting for the next acquisition or disposition to reset the narrative. DiamondRock's management has signaled "elevated capital recycling" over the next 12-18 months. What they buy (or don't buy) at current pricing will determine whether the balance sheet optimization translates into equity value creation or just cleaner financial statements.
Here's what I want you to take from DiamondRock's playbook, regardless of your scale. Look at your own capital structure and find the most expensive dollar you're carrying. For DiamondRock, it was an 8.25% preferred coupon... eliminating that was worth more than a 2% RevPAR gain across the portfolio. If you're an owner with high-cost mezzanine debt, a lingering SBA loan at above-market rates, or a line of credit you drew down in 2020 and never cleaned up... that's your preferred stock redemption. Run the annual cost of that capital against what you'd earn deploying the same cash into your property. If the cost exceeds the return, refinance it or retire it before you spend another dollar on renovation. The cheapest renovation in hospitality is the one you fund by eliminating expensive capital you no longer need.