NASDAQ • USD • CONSUMER CYCLICAL • TRAVEL LODGING
Current price is 112.8% of 52-week range
Overall score updated 9 days ago
Score confidence 48%
Overall Score
Score Breakdown
Momentum Signal
Last updated about 1 month ago
Marriott’s moat remains its fee-heavy, asset-light model paired with unmatched brand breadth (from luxury to select service) and Marriott Bonvoy scale, which lowers customer acquisition costs and supports pricing. In Q1 2026, the system reached roughly 9,926 properties and 1.80M rooms, with about 15,900 net rooms added, reinforcing distribution advantages for owners and franchisees. Industry demand is normalizing post-rebound, so share gains increasingly hinge on loyalty, co-branded cards, and development execution rather than pure cycle tailwinds.
Financially, Q1 2026 showed solid operating momentum: total revenue about $6.65B, reported net income $648M (EPS $2.43) and adjusted EPS $2.72 with adjusted EBITDA $1.398B, while worldwide RevPAR rose 4.2%. The broader model still generates strong earnings power (FY2025 net income $2.60B; diluted EPS $9.51), but valuation looks demanding and sensitive to any RevPAR deceleration, especially given limited clean provider metrics and mixed third-party P/E readings. Shareholder returns are a support: the dividend is about $2.68 annually (roughly 0.7%–0.9% yield) alongside ongoing buybacks.
Over the next 12 months, the bull case is steady RevPAR growth plus continued room net growth (management previously targeted ~4.5%–5% for 2026) and rising fee streams, particularly from co-branded cards. Key catalysts are sustained U.S. and international RevPAR, faster-than-expected development conversions, and continued capital returns; key risks are a travel slowdown, margin pressure from expenses/taxes, and multiple compression if growth normalizes. On balance, MAR looks like a high-quality compounder, but near-term upside appears more dependent on execution than on valuation expansion.
Recommendation: HOLD. The business is executing well with improving RevPAR and robust fee-based earnings, but the stock’s valuation leaves less margin of safety if demand cools or expectations reset.