Investors are expected to pump more money into buying, converting or building hotels in 2015 than in any year since the start of the global financial crisis, with a focus on budget and 'buzz'. In a sector enjoying the benefits of economic recovery and growing traveller numbers, yields are attractive compared to alternative real estate like office, industrial or retail.
"It's not about people loving hotels, it's about investors searching for a return on their money which they can't get these days on government bonds," said Nick Skea-Strachan of law firm BLP at this month's IHIF hotels conference in Berlin.
But investors say there are signs of overheating in some areas, making it more challenging to hit target returns that are typically around 6.5 to 7.5 percent.
That is forcing them to seek out niches and jump on new trends like lifestyle hotels, serving a generation of travellers looking for a hip place to hang out, not just somewhere to sleep.
Typically featuring smaller rooms, local-themed design and buzzy lounges, lifestyle covers both luxury and budget classes and includes hotels such as Starwood's W, IHG's Indigo , Citizen M, and Moxy. Hilton, Best Western and Germany's Steigenberger are among those recently announcing new brands in this space.
Examples of the genre include the privately owned 25 Hours Hotel in Berlin, where visitors flock to a 10th floor bar and restaurant that overlook the neighbouring zoo.
Liran Wizman, a developer and owner who is opening two W hotels in Amsterdam this year that will be managed by Starwood, told Reuters he had shifted his focus in the past couple of years from mid-scale hotels to lifestyle, which now makes up half his portfolio.
Prestige 'trophy' hotels in cities like New York, London and Paris will continue to be in demand, executives at the Berlin conference said, as institutions or high net worth individuals seek assets that will still be standing in 50 years' time.
But with travellers still keeping a eye on costs, the higher yields right now are in the budget sector. Chains such as Marriott say growth in their room numbers will be mainly at the economy end.
"There's a shortage of good quality economy product, I think we'll see more build in that sector," Patrick Fitzgibbon, senior vice president development, Europe & Africa at Hilton, told Reuters.
Consultants Christie + Co suggest those seeking higher yields should consider southern Europe such as Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain, where budget hotels can account for up to 58 percent of supply and where assets are often in need of some work. In a report, it said prime hotel yields can vary between 14 and 18 percent in Greece.
Another consultancy, HVS, said high prices in cities such as London and Paris were leading investors to look at hotels in smaller towns and cities. That is especially visible in Britain, where occupancy rates and revenue per available room in cities such as Manchester and Edinburgh have been rising as consumers take more mini-breaks.
The branded hotel groups have been moving to an 'asset-light' strategy in recent years, leaving it to others to own the hotel real estate, while they manage them under franchise or lease contracts.
Property giant Jones Lang LaSalle predicts $68 billion in hotel real estate transactions in 2015, a 15 percent increase on 2014, and the best year since 2007.
Of that around $24.7 billion is expected to be invested in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, with North American and Chinese investors set to be the major drivers.
"Yields are coming in and are relatively low from a historical perspective, but still offer a premium to general and commercial real estate," Marc Socker, MD hotel fund management at Invesco Real Estate told Reuters.
Invesco has 31 hotel assets worth $1.5 billion in Europe, accounting for 20 percent of its total European real estate assets under management.