Hilton's CFO talks success since IPO 10 years ago

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A decade after its IPO, Hilton (HLT) has expanded its hospitality footprint with room count up 80%, adding nearly half a million rooms. The stock has risen 300% since its debut.

CFO Kevin Jacobs credits Hilton's culture in powering growth that continues post-pandemic, from pent-up leisure demand to over 1 hotel opening per day. Looking ahead, development plans target over 460,000 additional rooms to drive Hilton's global development. Jacobs notes the shift towards experiences over material goods is fueling further travel recovery into 2023. With properties spanning 18 brands offering varied price points, Hilton aims to capture rising lodging activity.

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Video Transcript

KEVIN JACOBS: Yeah. Hey, Brad. Thanks for having me. It's great to be with you. And yeah, we're celebrating today 10 years since our IPO. It's amazing. It seems like you don't know where the time has gone, but you mentioned it. We've doubled our brand portfolio in that time, nearly doubled the size of the company. We continue to grow rapidly. So the next phase of growth is we're opening more than a hotel a day. We have a development pipeline of nearly 460,000 rooms, more rooms under construction than any other hotel company.

And you know, it's really a lot of it's been fueled by-- our success has been fueled by our culture since we were acquired by Blackstone and taken private in 2007. And everything we've done since then has been driven by our team members around the world and our culture. And we were just recently named the number one great place to work in the world by Great Place to Work and Fortune. So we're really proud of that.

And as you mentioned, we're really proud of our returns. So since our IPO 10 years ago, our total shareholder return has been about 330%, which is far outpaced the Dow Jones, the S&P 500, and our peer set.

- Yeah, absolutely. I mean, when you talk about that room base that's under construction right now and the capacity that's set to come online of about 460,000 rooms, half of that currently under construction as of the last earnings call and you discussed on that call. When you think about the costs that you were anticipating going into starting a lot of these projects, that's kind of moved given the credit conditions and a lot of what, for constructions--

- Move given the credit conditions and a lot of--

- A lot of this going forward here. So ultimately, where do you see some of those costs also comparing over a long-term basis?