HPL Hotels & Resorts, the private-equity-backed successor entity to Hersha Hospitality Trust's premium portfolio, acquired the InterContinental Auckland for $138.5 million, marking the company's entry into New Zealand and its first major acquisition outside North America since restructuring. The 157-room waterfront property sits on Princes Wharf, a 1.1-hectare freehold site in Auckland's Viaduct Harbour precinct, with unobstructed views of the Waitematā Harbour and direct adjacency to the city's America's Cup infrastructure.
The transaction closed through a local SPV structure with equity from Hersha Capital Partners and mezzanine financing from an undisclosed Asia-Pacific lender. HPL assumes the property's existing IHG management agreement, which runs through 2037 with two five-year extension options. The seller, a New Zealand family office that held the asset for 11 years, exited at a reported 5.8% trailing cap rate based on 2024 audited EBITDA of NZ$12.4 million (US$7.5 million). The price represents $881,000 per key, a 22% discount to replacement cost estimates for comparable waterfront luxury product in Auckland's CBD, where construction costs now exceed NZ$850,000 per key for ground-up development.
This marks a geographic pivot for HPL, which spent the prior 18 months divesting $340 million in secondary U.S. gateway assets—Miami Airport Marriott, Boston Seaport properties—to deleverage and reposition toward markets with structural supply constraints. New Zealand fits that profile. Auckland has seen zero new luxury hotel deliveries since 2019, and the city's international arrival forecasts call for 4.2 million visitors by 2026, up 31% from 2023 actuals, driven by resumption of direct China and U.S. routes. The InterContinental Auckland runs at 76% occupancy with an ADR of NZ$385 (US$233), lagging Sydney's Park Hyatt (NZ$620 ADR) and Melbourne's Crown Towers (NZ$490), signaling pricing headroom as inbound corporate and leisure demand normalizes. HPL's disclosed asset-management plan includes a NZ$8 million (US$4.8 million) renovation of the Club InterContinental lounge and installation of a dedicated meetings wing targeting Auckland's growing pharmaceutical-conference and superyacht-refit verticals.
The New Zealand allocation also hedges HPL's exposure to U.S. office-to-hotel conversion saturation. Domestic gateway markets now face 37 confirmed adaptive-reuse luxury projects in the pipeline through 2027, compressing forward RevPAR growth expectations. Auckland, by contrast, has no conversion pipeline and benefits from foreign-buyer restrictions that throttle speculative development. The city's luxury supply is effectively capped at nine properties with negligible new entrants until at least 2029, when a proposed 220-room Rosewood project on Quay Street may break ground, subject to resource consents. HPL's cost basis at $881,000 per key sits 38% below the estimated $1.42 million replacement cost for that Rosewood project, creating an embedded valuation buffer even if cap rates drift upward.
Allocators should monitor three signals: HPL's ability to push ADR above NZ$425 within 18 months without sacrificing occupancy, which would validate pricing power; the company's cost of capital for follow-on Asia-Pacific deals, as higher rates erode the arbitrage that made this transaction pencil; and Auckland's hotel transaction velocity—only two luxury properties have changed hands since 2021, so comparable-sale liquidity remains thin. If HPL can demonstrate 12-15% unlevered returns on this asset by mid-2026, expect the company to deploy another $200-$300 million into Australia's Sydney or Melbourne markets, where cap-rate compression has stalled but replacement-cost dynamics mirror Auckland's.
New Zealand now accounts for 4.7% of HPL's enterprise asset value, a modest toe-hold that becomes meaningful if the company replicates the entry strategy across Wellington (one luxury property, the InterContinental Wellington) or Queenstown, where no branded luxury product exists above 120 rooms.
The takeaway
HPL's New Zealand entry at **$138.5M** exploits supply-constrained luxury markets with **38%** discount to replacement cost, testing Asia-Pacific expansion thesis.
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