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| As we look forward to 2014, our group booking pace for all 28 hotels is positive 3.1%, which is similar to the overall group pace we're seeing in 2013, and represents a nice improvement over where we stood last quarter on 2014 group pace. 21 of our 28 hotels are showing pace growth in excess of 10% in 2014. I should also note that while 2014 group bookings into our Renaissance Washington, DC are solid by historical standards as the hotel is having an exceptionally strong group year 2013 with group business up 22% the hotel's pace in 2014 is down as compared to 2013. On the positive side, our four hotels that underwent major renovations in 2013 are now showing 24% growth in group pace for 2014. I'll spend a minute on transient demand trends. Our portfolio is compromised primarily of urban business hotels. Accordingly, more than 60% of our overall demand comes from individual non-group travelers. We refer to this demand segment as transient demand. Individual business travelers comprise the bulk of our transient demand segment with high-rated premium transient, comprising 16% of our total demand. At the other end of the spectrum, government transient business, which has been a focus lately, comprises only about 3% of our overall demand. While political tactics such as sequestration and the recent federal government shutdown will have a short-term effect on our operations, these impacts are primarily isolated background noise, in our opinion. Let me put some things in perspective. In the third quarter, our government business was down 18% at an average rate of just $142. At the same time, our premium transient business was up 15% at an average rate of $247. In short, in spite of the childish behavior in Washington, D.C., the real engines of our economy, American corporations, are doing their part to drive continued growth, and in the process, businesses continue to send travelers on the road in record numbers. Turning now to operational efficiencies. As I noted, our operators did an exceptional job controlling costs in the third quarter. Our rooms' departmental expense per occupied room declined by 0.6% during the quarter, as our operators continued to streamline operations. Additionally, our hotels benefited from disciplined cost containment efforts in both G&A and energy expenses. Over the past three quarters, we've implemented new energy efficiency programs in roughly one quarter of our portfolio. These initiatives have helped to reduce our quarterly energy cost with portfolio-wide cost per occupied room declining by 6.9% in the third quarter. As we continue implementing these energy savings programs, we're targeting returns in excess of 20% on our invested capital. As I said, clearly, this was a model quarter in many ways. And we thank our operators and our team for the solid execution across the board. Moving on to recent and pending transactions, improving the quality and scale of our portfolio while gradually deleveraging our balance sheet in a shareholder-friendly way has been, and remains, our core strategic objective. We've recently either executed on or are in the process of executing on various transactions that advance this objective. For example, in the third quarter, we acquired a well located, but undercapitalized 1,053 room hotel called the Boston Park Plaza. When we announced this deal, we noted a broad range of value-add opportunities. And over the past several months, we've made good progress toward capitalizing on these opportunities. For example, our near-term goal of leasing the hotel's roughly 43,000-square feet of vacant retail space is moving forward well. |