December 31, 2024

Why Ohana’s Latest Acquisition is a ‘Bullseye’

An Ohana executive talks about why the 357-key Hyatt Regency in a Seattle suburb perfectly fits the company’s acquisition strategy. 

RENTON, Wash. (Dec. 31. 2024)—Austin, Texas-based Ohana Real Estate Investors announced on Monday that it acquired the 357-key Hyatt Regency Lake Washington in the Seattle suburb of Renton, Washington, from companies affiliated with Renton-based Seco Development for an undisclosed amount. The asset, a large, full-service hotel, is a “bullseye” for Ohana, but the process of closing the sale was anything but routine.

When asked how long it took the deal to come together, Eddie Yu, managing director of investments at Ohana, told Hotel Investment Today, “This was a particularly long one; it’s probably over a year that we’ve been working on it. We’re really glad to have finally gotten it done, but there were a lot of challenges along the way. Our team really stuck with it and navigated all the complexity.”

The asset has had a complicated history over the past few years, including an investor lawsuit and bankruptcy that was filed to help facilitate the sale. Media reports said Ohana offered $157 million for the asset when it was first put on the market in 2023.

Yu said Ohana acquired the asset using its typical equity fund vehicle. “It really fits within our investment strategy. This is a bullseye. It’s great real estate, newly built, in this case, and built to a very high spec. It’s in a great location. It’s right on the lakefront. It’s not a well-known property, but if you look at where it’s located, it’s one of the very few lakefront hotels in Seattle, and it’s new to boot,” he said. “There’s just a great story with it, where it’s a first-time hotel owner and a passion project for him, and he did an amazing job developing it. We’re operational experts. So, we’re inheriting that setup and I think we can take it to the next level with our platform.”

This is the first acquisition of 2024 for the company, which still is in search of deals. Yu said Ohana has about 10 potential deals in its pipeline right now. “We see a lot of potential in the market,” he said. “Looking back across the last couple of years, this is probably one of the biggest pipelines we’re bringing from the end of one year into the next.”

Ohana feels that its asset operational expertise will help improve the Hyatt Regency Lake Washington’s ROI. “The good thing about this asset is that we think a lot of the underperformance is in the operations versus needing anything,” Yu said. “It’s a credit to the seller that he did an amazing job building it beyond the typical Hyatt Regency. We’re really pleased with the physical quality of the property. It just needs the intention and focus that our team of experts can bring.”

Complicated History

The hotel has had a complicated history. It was first developed in 2015 after a Hyatt affiliate entered into a management agreement with Seco Development. The hotel opened in 2017 in Southport, a $590-million, 25-acre, mixed-use waterfront development in the Seattle area (which Seco also developed).

Seco’s Owner and CEO Michael Christ was sued earlier this year by 49 Chinese EB-5 investors who alleged that he managed the hotel project’s financing in ways that left them vulnerable when he originally put the hotel on the market in 2023. According to the lawsuit, 199 EB-5 investors each contributed $500,000 to the project and $99.5 million was put into a limited partnership, Southport Hotel EB-5 LP, which Christ managed.

According to The Registry, the hotel was first put on the market in 2023 after the property’s senior and mezzanine loans matured. Ohana expressed interest and reportedly offered $157 million for the property. However, the sale was stalled because of the lawsuit. In October, the companies that owned that hotel, which Christ owns, filed for bankruptcy as a way to sell the hotel and pay off about $145 million in debt, according to a report in the Seattle Times. The filings list $122 million in liabilities for the companies. The current status of the lawsuit is unknown.

Why newer is better for Ohana

Ohana president and chief investment officer Franco Famularo spoke with Hotel Investment Today last February about the company’s strategy. At the time, Famularo said Ohana had a bias toward newer real estate and said there was a “disconnect” in the market with full-service hotels. This asset hits on both of those theories.

Yu said many companies shy away from full-service properties because of the operational complexities, but that’s something Ohana is happy to embrace. Hyatt, with whom Ohana has had a long-standing relationship, will continue to manage the hotel. Ohana likes newer properties like the Hyatt Regency Lake Washington, Yu said, because they usually have fewer capex requirements (which is the case with this hotel), but he said there’s also a more subtle reason.

“There have been a lot of modernizations in the hotel industry, whether it’s technology, the way views are set up or the latest thinking on group space,” he said. “That all gets put into new properties that aren’t in older properties. So, in that sense, we think there’s better revenue-generating potential and even expense savings when you have a modern property that’s designed with the most modern thinking on architectural flows and things like that. We believe, over the long term, the ROI can compound faster at properties like that.”

Credit provider

Ohana also provides credit for the hospitality industry, whether equity capital, debt capital or for hotels with a displaced cash flow. Notably, the company recently provided a $225 million loan mezzanine loan for the Fontainebleau Miami Beach hotel, which was part of a larger $1.2 billion refinance, including a $975 million CMBS senior loan from Goldman Sachs. Yu said the investment profile for credit, which is funded by a subsidiary of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPP Investments), CPPIB Credit Investments III, follows a lot of the same themes that make ideal hotel acquisitions for the company.

“We still love that newer, high-quality real estate. The deals we’ve done this year, even around credit, have been related to brand new real estate or relatively new real estate, and very iconic, super well-located real estate,” he said. “We’ve financed a couple of very large, prominent resorts in Florida very recently, and that fits exactly with our thematic approach to what kind of real estate we want to bet on.” Ohana’s love of full-service assets also comes through on the credit side, Yu said.

“We think that there’s a dearth of capital on the full-service side that really knows what they’re doing,” he said. “That’s why we like full-service, not necessarily only because we believe there’s a lot you can do in the sector.”

About Ohana Real Estate Investors
Ohana Real Estate Investors (Ohana) is a vertically integrated real estate investment firm with expertise in the hospitality and residential sectors, focusing on urban and resort markets throughout North America. Founded in 2009, Ohana invests across the capital structure through dedicated equity and credit fund strategies and currently manages approximately $3 billion on behalf of a global investor base, including university endowments, foundations, and family offices. For more information, please visit ohanare.com.