Global hotel franchisor Wyndham Hotels and Resorts (WH 0.88%) revealed robust fourth-quarter 2019 earnings on Thursday before the markets opened, and included healthy earnings guidance for full-year 2020 in its release. The company's outlook comes with a boldface asterisk, however, in the form of potential impacts from the ongoing coronavirus epidemic that originated in Wuhan, China. 

Below, let's review the hotel specialist's financial scorecard, as well as the specifics of the 2020 guidance, bearing in mind that all comparable numbers that follow refer to those of the prior-year quarter.

Wyndham results: The snapshot view

Metric Q4 2019 Q4 2018 Change
Revenue $492 million $527 million (6.6%)
Net income $64 million $43 million 48.8%
Diluted earnings per share $0.68 $0.43 58.1%

Data source: Wyndham Hotels and Resorts.

A woman checks into a hotel at the front desk.

Image source: Getty Images.

Essential details from the quarter

  • Wyndham saw a 2.7% increase in royalties and franchise fees, to $113 million. The company's largest revenue stream -- marketing, reservation, and loyalty income -- rose 7.5% to $142 million.
  • Hotel management revenue improved by $2 million to $37 million, while license and other fees advanced by $3 million to $35 million.
  • Similar to Q3 2019, a drop in cost reimbursements revenue pushed total revenue down against the comparable prior-year quarter. This revenue item has an offsetting expense line on the income statement, so it doesn't impact Wyndham's adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA).
  • Revenue per available room (RevPAR) dipped by 3% to $36.36. In the U.S. RevPar declined by 3%, while international RevPAR was flat.
  • The company expanded its systemwide room base by 3% against the prior-year quarter. 
  • Wyndham's development pipeline grew 7% year over year to 1,500 hotels, or roughly 193,000 rooms. 
  • Adjusted EBITDA jumped 22% to $153 million, which management attributed to higher revenue (excluding cost-reimbursement revenue), lower marketing expense, and the realization of cost synergies from the integration of LaQuinta Inns into the Wyndham system.
  • The company increased its dividend by 10% to $0.32 per share, bringing its annualized dividend yield to 2.2%. 

A benign full-year forecast, with a caveat

Wyndham noted in its press release that it achieved tangible results in 2019 despite a rather soft environment for the hotel industry. CEO Geoffrey Balloti observed, "We finished 2019 with another solid quarter, capping off a year in which we delivered rooms growth, earnings growth and free cash flow that were in line with our expectations despite headwinds from a soft RevPAR environment. We achieved these results through consistent execution, careful expense management and disciplined capital allocation." 

The organization aims to continue this tight management approach to earnings in 2020. Wyndham's 2020 outlook targets a top line excluding cost reimbursements of $1.46 billion-$1.49 billion. At the midpoint of the range, this will represent an increase of 3% of over 2019's $1.43 billion in revenue before cost reimbursements.

The consumer discretionary stalwart anticipates generating adjusted EBITDA of $635 million-$645 million this year, or an increase of 4.4% over 2019's adjusted EBITDA of $613 million (at the midpoint of the range). Adjusted diluted earnings per share (EPS) are slated to rise nearly 8% to between $3.48 and $3.58.

The framework excludes any effects of the coronavirus epidemic. Wyndham's global exposure is significant, though perhaps not as concentrated as some of its multinational peers; its non-U.S. rooms equal roughly 40% of its total systemwide base.

During the company's earnings conference call on Thursday, management revealed that approximately 70% of Wyndham's hotels in China remain closed at present. For now, management has quantified potential headwinds from coronavirus (not included in its 2020 forecast outlined above) as follows:

  • An impact of 200 to 400 basis points on full-year global RevPAR
  • Roughly $5 million impact on first-quarter adjusted EBITDA
  • Roughly $8 million to $12 million impact on full-year EBITDA.

The key word in Wyndham's phrasing is "potential." At this point, these are approximations of the outbreak's damage to a relatively small portion of its business. However, the longer the epidemic persists in China, and the further its spreads across Asia and beyond, the higher the likelihood that these estimates may harden into a fully year earnings revision next quarter. This slight uncertainty factored into the stock price on Thursday, as Wyndham shares traded down roughly 1.5% at mid-day.