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Aperture Seeks to Fill Void Between Large and Small Hotel Management Companies

CEO Charles Oswald Says M&A a Possibility

ATLANTA — Aperture Hotels is filling a void between the larger and smaller third-party management groups in the hotel industry.

Atlanta-based Aperture formerly operated as Banyan Tree Management and managed the hotel portfolio of Banyan Investment Group. Aperture has expanded its scope and will provide hotel management services to other hotel owners and hopes to grow its third-party management portfolio.

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1 Min Read
March 27, 2023 10:48 AM
Banyan Investment Group has spun off its hotel management platform, Banyan Tree Management, so the two can operate independently and focus on individual goals. They have rebranded as Satori Collective for hotel investment and Aperture Hotels for hotel operations.
Bryan Wroten
Bryan Wroten

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Charles Oswald, president and CEO of Aperture, said during a video interview with Hotel News Now at the 2023 Hunter Hotel Investment Conference that the company is targeting lifestyle, premium select-service and compact full-service hotels.

Now was the right time to take this step, Oswald said, as Banyan Investment Group "had matured."

Executives at both the investment company and management company realized that being on their own and not exclusively confined to one another would result in more opportunities for growth, he said.

Aperture operates 15 hotels and resorts with more than 2,000 rooms. The portfolio has branded and independent hotels and resorts in urban, suburban and leisure destination markets across the U.S.

When asked if Aperture has an appetite to merge with or acquire other third-party management companies, Oswald said "absolutely."

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5 Min Read
March 08, 2023 09:08 AM
Members of the Lodging Industry Investment Council discussed the intricacies of consolidations among hotel brands and management companies, including the need to maintain hands-on support as scale grows.
Dana Miller
Dana Miller

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"Management company M&A is a possibility for us. We would invite that opportunity, and hopefully we could identify somebody that is culturally a good fit, a group that has good business acumen and someone who maybe has a complementary portfolio that could work with ours," he said.

Oswald said the hotel management company landscape has changed within the past 10 years when it comes to scale.

"There was only one company [with] over 200 hotels 10 years ago," he added.

Markets To Target

Oswald said there's still some substantial upside in investing in the "Smile" states. For owners who like to "buy low and sell high," he said there's opportunities in the Midwest, Northeast and West Coast "if you believe in the long-term prospects and recovery in those locations."

For more from HNN's conversation with Charles Oswald, watch the video above.

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