Host Hotels Extends $600 Million Stock Sale Program Through 2028
The hotel REIT keeps its at-the-market equity option open even though it has never sold a single share under it.
May 29, 2026

Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. has extended a major stock-sale arrangement that has gone unused since it was first established three years ago, preserving the lodging real estate investment trust’s flexibility to raise capital when market conditions are favorable.
The Bethesda, Maryland-based company, which trades on the Nasdaq under the symbol HST, said that on May 27, 2026 it signed an amendment to a distribution agreement originally dated May 31, 2023. The arrangement is an at-the-market equity program, allowing Host or designated forward sellers to sell newly issued common shares periodically at prevailing market prices, up to a total of $600 million.
An Unused Option, Now Extended
To date, Host has not sold any shares under the program. The extension keeps the option available rather than signaling an immediate intention to issue equity.
The amendment moves the expiration date past its original May 31, 2026 deadline. Under the revised terms, the program now runs until the earliest of three events:
- The sale of shares reaching the full $600 million limit;
- A decision by Host to end the program at its own discretion, with written notice; or
- A decision by the participating financial firms to withdraw, with written notice.
Wall Street’s Dual Role
A group of major financial institutions supports the program in two capacities. Firms such as J.P. Morgan, BofA Securities, Goldman Sachs, Jefferies, Morgan Stanley, Scotia Capital, Truist and Wells Fargo act as sales agents or forward sellers, while affiliated banking entities including JPMorgan Chase Bank, Bank of America, The Bank of Nova Scotia, Truist Bank and Wells Fargo Bank serve as forward purchasers.
A Technical Update
Aside from the new expiration date, the amendment makes a single technical change: it shortens the settlement window for shares sold under the program to the next business day, known as T+1. That adjustment aligns the agreement with broader changes in U.S. securities settlement standards adopted since the program launched in 2023. No other terms were modified.
Host noted that its description of the amendment is not complete and that the full terms are governed by the document filed as an exhibit. The report was signed on the company’s behalf by Joseph C. Ottinger, senior vice president and corporate controller.
What It Means for Investors
The decision signals that Host wants a flexible financing tool ready without committing to share dilution. At-the-market programs let companies issue equity opportunistically, and Host’s choice to extend rather than retire the facility suggests management values keeping that capacity in reserve, even though it has so far declined to use it.