Apollo Global Management is one of the world’s most important alternative investment firms and a fundamental case for understanding the evolution of contemporary hotel investment.

After Blackstone, Brookfield, KKR, Starwood Capital and Oaktree, Apollo adds a different and highly relevant perspective.

Blackstone teaches how to read hotels as an asset class, a platform, a real estate cycle and a transformation machine.

Brookfield interprets hospitality as a real asset, tourism infrastructure and patient capital.

KKR shows the value of flexibility across private equity, credit, technology and capital solutions.

Starwood Capital demonstrates the power of brands, design, lifestyle and hospitality real estate.

Oaktree brings the culture of distressed credit, downside protection and capital stack discipline.

Apollo, by contrast, should be read as a major platform of credit, yield, insurance capital, private equity and asset-backed finance.

In the hotel sector, this distinction is very important.

Apollo is not a hotel brand.

It is not an operator such as Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, Four Seasons or Accor.

It is not a hotel brand creator like Starwood Capital.

It is not only a distressed investor like Oaktree.

Apollo is a global capital platform capable of entering hospitality through many forms:

  • credit;

  • private equity;

  • real estate debt;

  • asset-backed finance;

  • capital solutions;

  • preferred equity;

  • bridge financing;

  • rescue capital;

  • corporate lending;

  • opportunistic equity;

  • insurance capital;

  • structured financing.

Its role is particularly important because the modern hotel is no longer only a property.

It is cash flow.

It is collateral.

It is an operating business.

It is a consumer platform.

It is a financial structure.

It is an asset that requires flexible, patient capital aligned with the cycle.

Apollo is relevant precisely because it can read hospitality as a combination of cash flow, credit, real assets, operations, debt, yield and transformation.

The investment thesis

The central thesis is that Apollo Global Management is one of the most important investors for the hotel sector because it represents the convergence of credit, private equity, real estate and insurance capital.

This convergence is decisive for understanding the future of hotels.

Many hotel assets do not only need a buyer.

They need a capital solution.

This may be:

  • senior financing;

  • a bridge loan;

  • refinancing;

  • a mezzanine loan;

  • preferred equity;

  • a capex facility;

  • an equity partner;

  • a sale and leaseback structure;

  • asset-backed financing;

  • capital for acquisition or growth;

  • turnaround capital;

  • a take-private transaction.

Apollo is interesting because it can operate across almost all these areas.

Its model creates value through ten main levers:

  • credit origination;

  • financing of assets and platforms;

  • acquisition of operating businesses;

  • use of insurance capital through Athene;

  • real estate debt;

  • asset-backed finance;

  • transformational private equity;

  • customized capital solutions;

  • investment in hospitality and leisure platforms;

  • exits through sale, refinancing or return to market.

The Apollo case shows that hospitality is not only hotel ownership.

It is also credit origination.

It is also yield.

It is also cash flow.

It is also duration.

It is also financial structure.

It is also the relationship between capital and operations.

For the Italian market, this reading is particularly useful.

Many Italian hotels have beauty, demand and real estate value.

But they do not yet have an adequate financial structure.

Apollo teaches that the right capital can be more important than the mere availability of capital.

What Apollo Global Management is

Apollo Global Management is a global alternative investment firm.

The group operates across many areas:

  • credit;

  • equity;

  • real assets;

  • retirement services;

  • insurance solutions;

  • private equity;

  • real estate;

  • infrastructure;

  • asset-backed finance;

  • capital solutions.

Apollo has grown into one of the world’s largest platforms in private credit and alternative financial solutions.

The core of the Apollo model is its ability to originate, structure and manage capital across different levels of risk and return.

This is highly important for hotels.

A hotel can be financed or acquired in many ways.

It can be a stabilized asset with predictable cash flow.

It can be a resort to be repositioned.

It can be a portfolio to be refinanced.

It can be a leisure platform to be scaled.

It can be an operating company to be taken private.

It can be a business with underlying real estate assets.

It can be complex collateral.

Apollo is interesting because it can read all these situations not through a single lens, but through a multi-capital platform.

Apollo as a credit platform

Credit is the key to understanding Apollo.

Compared with many investors that are more equity-oriented, Apollo is deeply connected to the culture of credit and yield generation.

This does not mean that Apollo does not do private equity.

It does, and very significantly.

But its contemporary DNA is strongly connected to:

  • credit origination;

  • asset-backed finance;

  • investment grade private credit;

  • structured finance;

  • real estate credit;

  • yield generation;

  • capital solutions;

  • insurance liabilities;

  • the relationship between asset duration and capital duration.

In the hotel sector, this culture is fundamental.

Hotels need debt, refinancing, capex facilities, bridge financing, acquisitions, recapitalizations and complex structures.

A credit-driven investor can be useful not only when a hotel is distressed.

It can also be useful when a hotel is healthy but needs to grow, transform or stabilize its capital stack.

Apollo should therefore not be read only as an opportunistic investor.

It should be read as an architect of capital.

Apollo and Athene: why insurance capital matters

One of Apollo’s distinctive features is its relationship with Athene, the group’s retirement services platform.

This is very important for understanding the difference between Apollo and other investors.

Insurance capital has different characteristics from traditional private equity capital.

It seeks:

  • yield;

  • duration;

  • predictability;

  • credit quality;

  • asset-backed exposure;

  • stability;

  • cash flows;

  • matching between assets and liabilities.

In the hotel sector, this does not mean that every hotel is suitable for insurance capital.

Hotels are operational, cyclical and riskier than many stabilized real estate assets.

But certain forms of hotel credit can be compatible with this logic if they are well structured.

For example:

  • senior loans on stabilized assets;

  • portfolios with strong collateral;

  • secured financing;

  • assets with solid operators;

  • hotels with international brands;

  • debt with prudent LTV;

  • diversified portfolios;

  • predictable cash flow;

  • well-protected real estate exposure.

The presence of Athene makes Apollo particularly relevant because it allows the group to connect private origination with long-term yield requirements.

This is one of the major trends in global markets: insurance capital is increasingly entering private markets.

Hospitality, if properly structured, can also be part of this transformation.

Apollo and real estate

Apollo’s real estate platform integrates credit and equity strategies.

This integration is decisive.

In the hotel sector, it is not enough to choose between debt and equity.

A combination is often needed.

An asset may require:

  • senior debt for the acquisition;

  • bridge loan to close a transaction;

  • capex facility to renovate;

  • preferred equity to fill a capital gap;

  • common equity to take operating risk;

  • refinancing after stabilization;

  • sale or exit after value creation.

Apollo can work across several points of the capital stack.

This is the group’s real strength.

Many real estate investors are strong in acquisitions.

Many lenders are strong in debt.

Apollo can think across both dimensions.

For hotels, this capability is fundamental because hotel assets are almost always hybrid.

They are property, business, cash flow, brand, capex and operations.

Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance

Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance is an important component for understanding Apollo’s role in real estate credit.

The platform originates and invests in senior mortgages, mezzanine loans and other real estate debt investments secured by properties in the United States and Europe.

The central point is its ability to provide financing across different levels of the capital structure.

For hotels, this is essential.

A hotel may need:

  • senior loan;

  • subordinated debt;

  • bridge loan;

  • preferred equity;

  • acquisition financing;

  • development financing;

  • refinancing;

  • recapitalization;

  • capex financing.

These instruments are not equivalent.

Each one responds to a different problem.

A senior loan can finance a stabilized asset.

A bridge loan can support a transitional phase.

Preferred equity can cover part of the risk between debt and equity.

A capex facility can transform the product.

Refinancing can reduce financial pressure and prepare a new phase of growth.

Apollo is relevant because it has a very strong culture in structuring these solutions.

Apollo and the hotel as cash flow

Apollo tends to read many assets through the lens of cash flow.

This is highly useful in the hotel sector.

A hotel is not only a building.

It is a machine of revenues and costs.

It generates cash flow through:

  • rooms;

  • F&B;

  • spa;

  • meetings;

  • events;

  • retail;

  • services;

  • memberships;

  • branded residences;

  • resort fees;

  • gaming;

  • entertainment;

  • leisure experiences.

But it consumes cash flow through:

  • staff;

  • energy;

  • maintenance;

  • marketing;

  • distribution;

  • franchise fees;

  • management fees;

  • debt;

  • capex;

  • taxes;

  • insurance.

The value of a hotel depends on the quality and stability of this cash flow.

Apollo is interesting because it thinks deeply about the ability of cash flow to support capital.

The question is not only: how much is the hotel worth?

The question is:

  • how much cash flow does it produce?

  • how stable is it?

  • how cyclical is it?

  • how much capex does it require?

  • how much debt can it support?

  • which part of the capital stack is protected?

  • what return is coherent with the risk?

  • who controls the operations?

  • what is the exit value?

This is a very useful reading for the Italian market.

The Venetian Resort Las Vegas: resort, operating company and real estate separation

One of the most important cases for understanding Apollo in hospitality is The Venetian Resort Las Vegas.

Apollo-managed funds acquired the operating companies of The Venetian Resort Las Vegas and The Venetian Expo, while VICI Properties acquired the related real estate assets and entered into a long-term triple-net lease.

This transaction is fundamental because it shows a highly sophisticated structure.

Apollo did not simply buy a hotel.

It acquired the operating component of one of the largest and most iconic integrated resorts in Las Vegas.

The Venetian combines:

  • more than 7,000 suites;

  • gaming;

  • meetings;

  • conventions;

  • entertainment;

  • restaurants;

  • retail;

  • leisure;

  • location on the Strip;

  • brand recognition;

  • large visitor flows;

  • integrated experience.

The separation between real estate and operating company is central.

VICI owns the real estate.

Apollo controls the operating business.

The lease connects the two dimensions.

This structure makes it possible to separate:

  • real estate ownership;

  • operating management;

  • lease cash flows;

  • business risk;

  • value of land and buildings;

  • operating upside;

  • long-term obligations.

For Italian hospitality, this is a very important lesson.

Many Italian hotels still confuse real estate ownership and operations.

Apollo shows that, in large transactions, separation can create financial efficiency and strategic clarity.

Why The Venetian is an investment-grade case

The Venetian is an investment-grade case because it shows how a large integrated resort can be read as a cash flow platform.

It is not only a hotel.

It is a city within the city.

It creates value from multiple sources:

Component Economic function
Suites Accommodation base, ADR, occupancy and premium clientele
Casino Gaming revenue, entertainment and international demand
Expo / convention MICE, groups, business travel and major events
F&B Ancillary revenue, attraction and guest retention
Retail Monetization of internal traffic
Entertainment Differentiation, pricing power and leisure demand
Location Competitive barrier and real estate value
Lease structure Separation between ownership and operations
Capex Product protection and competitiveness maintenance
Brand Reputation, recognition and demand

Apollo sees The Venetian as a complex operating platform, not a simple hotel.

Value comes from the combination of scale, cash flow, experience, management and financial structure.

Diamond Resorts: vacation ownership and leisure platform

Another relevant case is Diamond Resorts.

Apollo owned Diamond Resorts, which was later acquired by Hilton Grand Vacations.

The case is interesting because it concerns vacation ownership, a segment that differs from traditional hotels.

Diamond Resorts was a platform with resorts, memberships, timeshare, recurring customers and leisure-related cash flows.

This segment is very important for understanding Apollo.

Vacation ownership combines:

  • hospitality;

  • consumer finance;

  • membership;

  • recurring revenues;

  • resort operations;

  • sales;

  • customer management;

  • consumer financing;

  • loyalty;

  • distribution platform.

It is not only hotel management.

It is a financial and commercial model.

Apollo read Diamond Resorts as a leisure and cash flow platform, not as a simple resort portfolio.

The subsequent sale to Hilton Grand Vacations also demonstrates an important point: a leisure platform can have significant strategic value for an industrial operator.

What Diamond Resorts teaches

The Diamond Resorts case teaches at least six lessons.

1. Leisure can be financialized

Vacation ownership and membership transform hospitality into more recurring cash flows.

2. The customer is an asset

In timeshare and vacation ownership, the customer relationship is part of the value.

3. The resort is not only real estate

It is a commercial, financial and operating platform.

4. Strategic exit can create value

Hilton Grand Vacations was a natural strategic buyer.

5. Capital must understand the consumer

It is not enough to read rooms. One must understand sales, retention, consumer credit and loyalty.

6. Leisure tourism can become asset-backed

Cash flows, contracts, resorts and customers can be read as a financeable base.

For Italy, the case is useful because many resorts could develop more recurring components:

  • memberships;

  • clubs;

  • residences;

  • fractional models;

  • long stay;

  • loyalty programs;

  • recurring experiences;

  • family and leisure formulas.

Naturally, governance, transparency and product quality are required.

Soho House: membership, lifestyle and private markets

Another very interesting case is Soho House.

Apollo participated with equity and debt capital in the take-private of Soho House, led by MCR Hotels.

This case shows another dimension of hospitality.

Soho House is not a traditional hotel.

It is a platform of membership, clubs, hospitality, F&B, lifestyle, community, rooms and social spaces.

The value of Soho House does not lie only in its properties.

It lies in:

  • brand;

  • membership;

  • community;

  • F&B;

  • lifestyle;

  • global cities;

  • creative demand;

  • club culture;

  • hospitality;

  • recurring revenues;

  • international expansion.

For Apollo, the transaction is interesting because it combines equity and debt, brand and cash flow, membership and hospitality.

The take-private structure is coherent with a business that requires long-term vision and less pressure from public markets.

This is very important.

Some hospitality platforms are not well suited to the volatility of listed markets.

They may need private capital to invest, rationalize, grow and recover strategic coherence.

Soho House and the lesson for Italy

The Soho House case teaches that contemporary hospitality is not made only of rooms.

It is also made of belonging.

Community.

Club.

F&B.

Design.

Social energy.

Experience.

In Italy, this theme is highly interesting.

Many historic hotels, urban palaces, rooftops, resorts, villas and mixed-use spaces could develop membership components.

Not necessarily by copying Soho House.

But by learning the logic:

  • create community;

  • generate recurring revenues;

  • enhance F&B;

  • activate social spaces;

  • use the hotel also for local residents;

  • develop events;

  • connect rooms, restaurants and clubs;

  • increase frequency of use.

This is a very important frontier for cities such as Rome, Milan, Florence, Naples, Venice and Turin.

The hotel of the future will not always be only a place to sleep.

It may become an urban platform.

ENPAM: Apollo and Italian real estate

The ENPAM case is relevant for understanding the relationship between Apollo and Italy.

Apollo acquired a large real estate portfolio from ENPAM, composed of commercial and residential assets located mainly in Rome and Milan and also including hotel assets.

This transaction is important because it shows Apollo’s interest in Italy as a real estate market.

It was not a purely hotel transaction.

But it is very useful for reading the context.

Apollo looks at Italy as a market with:

  • complex assets;

  • institutional portfolios;

  • real estate value;

  • primary cities;

  • need for management;

  • value creation potential;

  • situations to be structured;

  • capital opportunities.

For the Italian hotel sector, the message is clear.

Large investors do not look only at the single hotel.

They look at portfolios, platforms, capital stacks, cities, destinations and relationships with institutional owners.

Apollo and capital solutions

The concept of capital solutions is central to the Apollo model.

In the hotel sector, a capital solution can solve very different problems.

An owner may need to:

  • refinance maturing debt;

  • finance capex;

  • acquire a second hotel;

  • complete a conversion;

  • support a brand change;

  • cover a ramp-up phase;

  • restructure a bank position;

  • attract a partner without selling everything;

  • create a joint venture;

  • separate real estate and operations;

  • monetize an asset without losing operations;

  • prepare a future sale.

Apollo is interesting because its model is flexible.

It does not necessarily start from the question: should we buy or not buy?

It starts from the question: what is the correct capital structure?

This approach is highly useful for Italian hotels.

Many owners do not want to sell.

But they must invest.

Many want to grow.

But they do not have sufficient equity.

Many have debt.

But not enough cash flow to support it after the rise in interest rates.

Many have valid properties.

But weak products.

Apollo teaches that between a full sale and immobility, there are many alternatives.

The hotel capital stack according to an Apollo logic

Apollo can be read as one of the most sophisticated investors in capital stack design.

A hotel can have several layers of capital.

Layer Function Apollo logic
Senior debt Finances stabilized assets or assets with strong collateral Protection, yield, prudent LTV
Bridge loan Covers a transitional phase Speed, flexibility, clear exit
Mezzanine debt Fills the gap between senior debt and equity Higher yield, controlled risk
Preferred equity Hybrid capital Recapitalization, value-add, protection
Common equity Ordinary equity Operating upside and transformation
Asset-backed finance Financing secured by cash flows or assets Origination, yield, collateral
Capex facility Finances works and repositioning Product protection and value growth
Rescue capital Stabilizes critical situations High risk, coherent pricing
Sale and leaseback Monetizes real estate while preserving operations Separation of ownership and management
Take-private financing Supports platforms outside public markets Long-term vision

This table shows something important.

Capital is not a single line item.

It is a system.

The quality of a hotel investment depends on how this system is built.

Apollo and hotel credit

Hotel credit is one of the most interesting areas for Apollo.

Hotels need credit because they are capital-intensive assets.

They require investment for:

  • acquisition;

  • development;

  • renovation;

  • conversion;

  • brand standards;

  • maintenance;

  • technology;

  • sustainability;

  • expansion;

  • acquisitions;

  • refinancing.

But hotel credit is riskier than other real estate sectors.

Why?

Because cash flow is operational.

It is not a fixed rent guaranteed by an investment-grade tenant.

Revenue depends on occupancy, ADR, demand, distribution, reputation, management, costs and seasonality.

Apollo must therefore read:

  • quality of collateral;

  • operator capability;

  • stability of demand;

  • capex risks;

  • contract structure;

  • downside scenario;

  • exit value;

  • debt sustainability;

  • relationship between cash flow and debt service.

This discipline is fundamental for Italian hotels.

The wrong financing can destroy a good asset.

The right financing can unlock value.

Apollo and asset-backed finance

Asset-backed finance is one of the most important areas for understanding Apollo.

In a hotel context, asset-backed can mean many things.

It may concern:

  • real estate;

  • hotel portfolios;

  • receivables;

  • membership cash flows;

  • vacation ownership;

  • contracts;

  • rents;

  • leases;

  • cash flows with collateral;

  • real estate collateral.

Apollo is strong because it knows how to turn assets and cash flows into financial structures.

This is highly relevant for hospitality.

The hotel sector generates many flows, but they are often not structured efficiently.

In the future, a growing part of value may come from the ability to finance:

  • portfolios;

  • memberships;

  • branded residences;

  • serviced apartments;

  • resort clubs;

  • vacation ownership;

  • long stay;

  • lease income;

  • hotel receivables;

  • digital booking platforms.

Naturally, prudence is required.

Not all cash flows are financeable.

But Apollo shows that hospitality can also be read as an asset-backed universe.

Apollo versus Oaktree

The comparison with Oaktree is natural.

Both are very strong in credit.

But their cultures are different.

Element Apollo Oaktree
Identity Credit, insurance, yield, asset-backed finance Distressed credit, downside protection, special situations
Hospitality Financeable cash flow, capital solutions, structured credit Distress, restructuring, UTPs, NPLs, turnaround
Strength Origination, scale, insurance capital, complex financing Price, risk, capital protection
Hotel Cash flow to be financed and platform to be structured Operating collateral and special situation
Italy Refinancing, capex debt, sale and leaseback, platforms UTPs, NPLs, stressed hotels, turnaround

Oaktree often starts from risk and distress.

Apollo more often starts from yield, structure and the ability to originate credit.

Both are fundamental.

But they are not the same.

Apollo versus Blackstone

The comparison with Blackstone helps distinguish two very different approaches to alternative capital.

Element Apollo Blackstone
Identity Credit, insurance, capital solutions, private equity Global real estate, private equity, platforms
Hospitality Debt, cash flow, complex transactions, financing Asset class, platforms, capex, exit
Examples Venetian operations, Diamond Resorts, Soho House financing Hilton, Motel 6, BRE Hotels, HIP, Village Hotels
Strength Financial structure and credit origination Real estate scale and transformation capability
Hotel reading Capital stack and financeable cash flow Operating asset and portfolio

Blackstone is more iconic as an owner and transformer of hotels.

Apollo is more interesting as a capital structurer and financier of platforms.

Apollo versus Brookfield

Brookfield interprets hospitality and leisure as real assets and tourism infrastructure.

Apollo reads them more as financeable assets and cash flows.

Element Apollo Brookfield
Culture Credit, yield, insurance capital Real assets, infrastructure, ownership
Hotel Cash flow, collateral, financing Tourism infrastructure and real asset
Capital Insurance-linked, credit-oriented, structured Patient, asset-owner oriented, real assets
Examples Venetian operating companies, Diamond Resorts Center Parcs, Atlantis
Italy Debt, refinancing, asset-backed, capital solutions Resorts, thermal assets, holiday villages, leisure infrastructure

Brookfield owns and develops asset value.

Apollo structures and finances value.

Apollo versus KKR

KKR and Apollo are both multi-strategy giants.

But KKR has a culture more centered on private equity and corporate transformation, while Apollo is more strongly associated with credit and yield.

Element Apollo KKR
Culture Credit, yield, insurance, asset-backed Private equity, credit, capital solutions
Hospitality Financing, cash flow, platform debt, take-private Platforms, growth, technology, private equity
Strength Credit origination and capital stack Transformation and multi-strategy flexibility
Hotel Financeable cash flow Investable business
Italy Refinancing, capex, debt, portfolios Consolidation, platforms, growth capital

KKR is more transformative.

Apollo is more financial and credit-oriented.

Apollo versus Starwood Capital

Starwood Capital is more hotel-oriented, brand-driven and creative.

Apollo is more financial, credit-driven and structural.

Element Apollo Starwood Capital
Identity Credit, private equity, capital solutions Hospitality real estate, brand creation
Hotel Cash flow, capital stack, financing Product, brand, design, experience
Strength Debt, yield, structured finance Brand, lifestyle, asset management
Italy Portfolios, refinancing, sale and leaseback Lifestyle, luxury, branded residences

Starwood imagines the product.

Apollo structures the capital.

An excellent hotel project may need both.

Apollo and Italy

Italy is a very interesting market for an Apollo logic.

Not necessarily because Apollo must buy Italian hotels.

But because many Italian hotels need exactly what Apollo knows how to structure: flexible capital.

The Italian market includes:

  • strong destinations;

  • international demand;

  • real estate heritage;

  • historic hotels;

  • resorts;

  • thermal assets;

  • family hotels;

  • fragmented portfolios;

  • deferred capex;

  • bank debt to be refinanced;

  • need for branded repositioning;

  • family succession issues;

  • limited separation between ownership and operations;

  • sale and leaseback potential;

  • need for platforms.

Apollo could be relevant for Italy not only as a buyer, but as a provider of capital solutions.

This is a fundamental point.

Many Italian entrepreneurs think of funds only as buyers.

But an investor like Apollo can also be:

  • lender;

  • partner;

  • financier;

  • structurer;

  • credit investor;

  • preferred equity provider;

  • take-private partner;

  • refinancing counterparty;

  • platform investor.

Where an Apollo-style logic could work in Italy

Area Potential opportunity
Rome Historic hotels, luxury conversions, refinancing, sale and leaseback
Milan Business hotels, serviced apartments, urban portfolios, corporate demand
Venice Complex trophy assets, capex, lease structure, financing
Florence Boutique luxury, palaces, family ownership, preferred equity
Lake Como Luxury leisure, branded residences, refinancing and development
Sardinia Seasonal resorts, capex debt, international operators, sale and leaseback
Sicily Sea and culture resorts, incomplete development, capital partner
Puglia Masserie, lifestyle resorts, growth capital, capex facility
Tuscany Villages, wine resorts, mixed-use, branded residences
Dolomites Wellness hotels, succession, capex, dual seasonality
Italian thermal destinations Medical wellness, longevity, refinancing, capital stack
Romagna Riviera Family hotels, portfolios, aggregation and refinancing
Serviced apartments Long stay, corporate demand, asset-backed finance
Mixed portfolios Hotels, retail, offices, residential, capital solutions

This table shows that Apollo should not be imagined only around trophy assets.

The Apollo logic can also work across portfolios, debt, mixed transactions, asset-backed finance and capital solutions.

Which Italian assets would be most compatible with Apollo

Not all Italian hotels are suited to an Apollo logic.

The most coherent assets are those where capital can be structured in a sophisticated way.

Type of asset Possible Apollo solution
Stabilized hotel with maturing debt Senior refinancing
Resort with significant capex Capex facility, preferred equity
Urban portfolio Real estate debt, equity, refinancing
Historic hotel to be converted Bridge financing, development loan
Asset with strong real estate ownership Sale and leaseback
Growing hospitality platform Growth capital, private equity
Serviced apartments Asset-backed finance, real estate credit
Resort with memberships or residences Structured finance
Hotel with cash flow but rigid debt Recapitalization
Operator to be privatized or consolidated Take-private financing, equity plus debt

The lesson is clear.

Apollo looks for situations where capital can be designed.

A beautiful hotel is not enough.

There must be a financial structure capable of transforming beauty, cash flow and collateral into value.

How to make an Italian hotel interesting for Apollo

An Italian hotel becomes more interesting for an investor like Apollo when cash flow, collateral and financial structure are legible.

There are ten key characteristics.

1. Clear cash flow

ADR, occupancy, RevPAR, GOP, EBITDA and seasonality must be well documented.

2. Assessable collateral

Real estate value must be supported by valuations, comparables and sale scenarios.

3. Mapped debt

Maturities, covenants, rates, guarantees and priorities must be clear.

4. Quantified capex

The investment plan must be detailed, with timing, costs and expected returns.

5. Credible operator

The financier must know who protects the cash flow.

6. Coherent brand

A strong brand can improve distribution, demand and financeability.

7. Exit or refinancing

The route to capital recovery or monetization must be clear.

8. Ordered corporate structure

Real estate, operating company, contracts and ownership must be legible.

9. Scale potential

Portfolios and platforms are more interesting than small single assets.

10. Coherence between capital and project

Senior debt, preferred equity, mezzanine, equity or sale and leaseback must be chosen according to the real problem.

A hotel does not have to be perfect.

It has to be financeable.

Why many Italian hotels need an Apollo-style logic

Many Italian hotels are blocked between two extremes.

On one side, full sale.

On the other, immobility.

In between, there is an entire world of financial solutions that remain underused.

For example:

  • refinancing;

  • bridge loan;

  • preferred equity;

  • capex debt;

  • joint venture;

  • sale and leaseback;

  • sale and manage-back;

  • recapitalization;

  • structured finance;

  • asset-backed finance;

  • portfolio financing.

This is exactly the space where an Apollo logic can be useful.

Many owners do not want to give up control.

But they do not have enough capital.

Many assets have value.

But the product is not updated.

Many hotels generate cash flow.

But not enough to support existing debt.

Many portfolios are interesting.

But they are not structured.

Apollo teaches that the problem is often not the asset.

It is the capital structure.

What the Italian market can learn

The Apollo case offers many lessons for Italian hospitality.

1. Capital must be designed

There is no single form of capital. Each problem requires the correct instrument.

2. Cash flow is central

The beauty of the property is not enough if the cash flow cannot support debt.

3. The hotel is asset-backed

Real estate, cash flows, contracts, memberships and residences can become a financeable base.

4. Sale and leaseback can be useful

Separating real estate and operations can release capital, but requires contractual discipline.

5. Insurance capital seeks quality and duration

Some hotels can become interesting if they offer protected cash flows and strong collateral.

6. Leisure can become a platform

The Venetian, Diamond Resorts and Soho House show different forms of financeable leisure.

7. Debt is not only a problem

It can be a lever for growth, capex and transformation.

8. Governance increases financeability

Clear structures attract better capital.

9. Portfolios are worth more than single assets

Scale, diversification and reporting improve the dialogue with investors.

10. Italy must use more financial instruments

The Italian hotel market cannot depend only on traditional bank debt, family capital and real estate sale.

To explore these themes further, readers may consult the hotel guides published on www.robertonecci.it, the articles available on the Investimenti Alberghieri blog and the updates published on the InvestHotel blog.

Apollo as a benchmark for hotel investors

Apollo is a benchmark for at least ten categories of market participants.

The first category is credit funds. Apollo shows how credit can be originated, structured and managed on a global scale.

The second category is hotel owners. The group demonstrates that between sale and immobility there are many capital solutions.

The third category is banks. Hotel credit must be built on cash flow, collateral, capex and operator quality.

The fourth category is real estate funds. Hotels must be read across the entire capital stack, not only as equity.

The fifth category is leisure operators. The Venetian, Diamond and Soho House show the financeability of complex platforms.

The sixth category is advisors. Apollo-like transactions require integrated expertise in debt, equity, real estate, tax, contracts and operations.

The seventh category is family owners. Family capital can be supported by more sophisticated instruments.

The eighth category is insurance investors. Some hospitality exposures can be compatible with yield and duration strategies, if properly structured.

The ninth category is developers. Bridge financing, development loans and preferred equity can make complex projects possible.

The tenth category is destinations. A properly financed hotel can generate capex, employment, quality and territorial value.

Apollo teaches that in hospitality, capital must not only buy.

It must structure.

FAQ on Apollo and hotel investments

What is Apollo Global Management?

Apollo Global Management is one of the world’s leading alternative investment firms, active in credit, equity, real assets, retirement services, private equity, real estate and capital solutions.

Is Apollo a hotel operator?

No. Apollo is neither a hotel brand nor a hotel operator. It is an investor and capital platform that can enter hospitality through credit, equity, financing, real estate debt and capital solutions.

Why is Apollo important in the hotel sector?

Because hotels require complex capital: debt, refinancing, capex, private equity, asset-backed finance, sale and leaseback and hybrid instruments.

What does The Venetian case teach?

The Venetian shows the separation between real estate and operating company and demonstrates how a large integrated resort can be read as a cash flow platform.

What does Diamond Resorts teach?

Diamond Resorts shows the value of vacation ownership, membership, recurring leisure and consumer finance platforms applied to hospitality.

What does Soho House teach?

Soho House demonstrates that hospitality, membership, clubs, community and lifestyle can become platforms financeable by private capital.

Why is Athene important for Apollo?

Athene brings the insurance capital dimension: capital oriented toward yield, duration, asset-backed exposure and credit quality.

What is the difference between Apollo and Oaktree?

Oaktree is more connected to distressed investing, downside protection and special situations. Apollo is more connected to credit origination, yield, insurance capital and asset-backed finance.

What is the difference between Apollo and Blackstone?

Blackstone is more iconic as a major real estate investor and platform owner. Apollo is more relevant as a capital structurer, credit provider and financing platform.

Could Apollo invest in Italian hotels?

Potentially yes, especially in transactions with legible cash flow, strong collateral, portfolios, refinancing, capex, sale and leaseback or leisure platforms.

What can Italy learn from Apollo?

That hotel value does not depend only on beauty and demand, but also on capital structure, debt quality, cash flow and project financeability.

Conclusion

Apollo Global Management is one of the most important cases for understanding the future of hotel investment.

Not because it is the best-known hotel owner.

Not because it is a hotel brand.

Not because it has created a hospitality imaginary like Starwood Capital.

Apollo is important because it represents one of the decisive dimensions of the future: capital structuring.

In the contemporary hotel market, the hotel is not only an asset.

It is cash flow.

It is collateral.

It is debt.

It is lease.

It is membership.

It is resort.

It is platform.

It is yield.

It is duration.

It is risk.

It is structure.

With The Venetian, Apollo shows how a large integrated resort can be read through operations, leases, real estate and cash flow.

With Diamond Resorts, it shows the value of leisure and vacation ownership platforms.

With Soho House, it shows the interest of private capital in membership, clubs, lifestyle and community.

With its real estate and credit platforms, it shows how capital can enter hospitality in many different forms.

For Italy, the lesson is very clear.

Beautiful hotels are not enough.

Strong destinations are not enough.

Tourism demand is not enough.

Coherent capital is needed.

Sustainable debt is needed.

Financeable capex is needed.

Legible cash flow is needed.

Ordered governance is needed.

Separation between ownership and operations is needed when useful.

The ability to use more sophisticated instruments is needed.

Apollo teaches that between selling a hotel and doing nothing, there is an entire universe of capital solutions.

And in an Italian hotel market that must grow, renew itself, refinance itself and become more institutional, this is a fundamental lesson.

The most useful capital is not always the capital that buys.

Sometimes it is the capital that structures.


Historic hotels, resorts, thermal properties, hotel portfolios, refinancing transactions, sale and leaseback, capex financing, leisure platforms, asset-backed finance and complex capital stacks require an integrated reading of real estate, operations, debt, equity, tax, contracts, brand and market dynamics.

For hotel valuations, investment transactions, development, repositioning, strategic advisory and hospitality asset enhancement, visit Hotel Management Group.

Hotel Management Group supports owners, investors and operators in the valuation, development and enhancement of hotel assets.

Roberto Necci - r.necci@robertonecci.it 

Share