Hersha Hospitality Trust

Hersha Hospitality Trust is a real estate investment trust that invests in hotels. The company is named after the wife of the founder.[2] It is organized in Maryland, with its principal office in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. As of December 31, 2019, the company wholly owned 38 hotels comprising 6,104 rooms and partially owned 9 hotels comprising 1,425 rooms, all of which were on either the West Coast of the United States or the East Coast of the United States.[1]

Hersha Hospitality Trust
Public company
Traded asNYSE: HT (Class A)
S&P 600 component
IndustryReal estate investment trust
Founded1984 (1984)
FounderHasu P. Shah
HeadquartersHarrisburg, Pennsylvania
Key people
Hasu P. Shah, Chairman
Jay H. Shah, CEO
Neil H. Shah, COO
Ashish R. Parikh, CFO
ProductsHotels
Revenue $529 million (2019)
-$27 million (2019)
Total assets $2.122 billion (2019)
Total equity $807 million (2019)
Number of employees
49 (2019)
Websitewww.hersha.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

History

In January 1979, Indian-American immigrant Hasu P. Shah and his wife, Hersha, bought an 11-room motel near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[2]

In 1984, Hasu Shah formed the company and purchased a hotel in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[2]

In 1998, the company was organized into a Maryland real estate investment trust and in January 1999, it became a public company via an initial public offering.[1]

In May 2006, the company acquired 4 Boston-area hotels for $44 million.[3]

In June 2015, the company acquired the St. Gregory Hotel in Washington, D.C. for $57 million.[4]

In February 2016, the company sold 7 of its Manhattan hotels to a joint venture with Chinese company Cindat Capital Management.[5][6] The company also acquired The Ritz-Carlton, Georgetown for $49.9 million.[6][7]

gollark: I "fixed" it.
gollark: ... how many services have I not disabled properly
gollark: Um. What. The old IRC bridge?
gollark: Let's see if `kexec` works, since the BIOS on this server is awfully slow.
gollark: > An Validation is either a value of the type err or a, similar to Either. However, the Applicative instance for Validation accumulates errors using a Semigroup on err. In contrast, the Applicative for Either returns only the first error.> A consequence of this is that Validation has no Bind or Monad instance. This is because such an instance would violate the law that a Monad's ap must equal the Applicative's <*>

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.