Hilton Grand Vacations Inc. (NYSE:HGV) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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Hilton Grand Vacations Inc. (NYSE:HGV) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript May 9, 2024

Hilton Grand Vacations Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $ EPS, expectations were $0.87. Hilton Grand Vacations Inc. isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).

Operator: Good morning and welcome to the Hilton Grand Vacations First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. A telephone replay will be available for seven days following the call. The dial in number is 844-512-2921 and enter pin 13743185. At this time, all participants have been placed in a listen only mode, and the floor will be open for your questions following the presentation. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the call over to Mark Melnyk, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Mark Melnyk : Thank you, Operator, and welcome to the Hilton Grand Vacations first quarter 2024 earnings call. As a reminder, our discussions this morning will include forward looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements, and the statements are effective only as of today, we undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise these statements. For a discussion of some of the factors that could cause actual results to differ, please see the Risk Factors section of our SEC filings. We’ll also be referring to certain non-GAAP financial measures. You can find definitions and components of such non-GAAP numbers, as well as reconciliations of non-GAAP and GAAP financial measures discussed today in our earnings press release and on our website at investors.hgv.com.

Our reported results for all periods reflect accounting rules under ASC 606 which we adopted in 2018. Under ASC 606, we’re required to defer certain revenues and expenses related to sales made in the period when a project is under construction and then hold-off on recognizing those revenues and expenses until the period when construction is completed. For ease of comparability and to simplify our discussion today, our comments on adjusted EBITDA and our real estate results will refer to results excluding the net impact of construction related deferrals and recognitions for all reporting periods. To help you make more meaningful comparisons you can find details of our current and historical deferral and recognitions in Table T1 in our earnings release and complete accounting of our historical deferral and recognition activity can also be found in Excel format on the financial reporting section of our investor relations website.

In a moment, our Chief Executive Officer, Mark Wang will provide highlights from the quarter in addition to an update of our current operations and company strategy. After Mark’s comments, our President and Chief Financial Officer, Dan Mathewes will go through the financial details for the quarter. Mark and Dan will then make themselves available for your questions. With that, let me turn the call over to our CEO, Mark Wang. Mark?

Mark Wang: Morning, everyone and welcome to our first quarter earnings call. Reported contract sales in the quarter was $631 million and EBITDA was $270 million with margins of 24%, which includes just over two months results from our recently closed Bluegreen acquisition. I’m happy with the results overall, and I’m even more encouraged when looking at the momentum that we built over the course of the quarter. Recall that in fourth quarter we adjusted some marketing channels that our legacy business to optimize our tour flow, which we expected would create some follow on effects in the first half of ‘24. We came into the year with a goal to dial up some of our marketing activities in a thoughtful way and accelerate package activations of our tour pipeline, and these efforts began to yield results as we moved through the quarter.

While we started with a modest year-over-year decline in tours in January, we saw an acceleration each month of the quarter exiting with a low-single-digit positive tour growth in March, which put us solidly on track relative to our expectations for the full year. We also added more packages this quarter than any other quarter since mid ‘22, and our mix of activated packages is back to record levels we saw in the first half of ‘23. These trends speak to a consumer that remains committed to travel, despite some of the macroeconomic pressures that have built up, particularly in regards to inflation. While those pressures are still leading to some hesitancy at the sales tables, our sales teams have made adjustments to help highlight the value proposition of ownership, which should result in improved close rates as we move through the year.

It’s also important to note the continued resilience of our owner business, which saw an acceleration in tour growth compared to the fourth quarter, along with improved close rates. The repeat nature of our dedicated owner base is a key feature of our business that drives stability and embedded value creation in our model over time. Our owners love the level of HGV service and the benefits offered by our max membership. They want to use the product more, and ultimately that drives additional upgrade business. Nearly a third of our members are HGV Max only two years after our launch, indicating how successful the program has been at attracting existing members as well as new buyers, and as we welcome our new Bluegreen owners into the HGV system over time, we’re confident that the HGV max benefits and service levels will resonate with them all very well.

Speaking of Bluegreen, since closing our acquisition in January, we’ve been hard at work on our rebranding plans and integration. A lot of great work has been done by our teams and I’m very pleased with how they’re executing and coming together over the last few months. There’s still a lot of work left ahead of us, but the foundation of our business is better than ever. I’m also excited about our recently announced partnership with Great Wolf Lodge, which will create a new source of lead flow that we think will be a great fit with the HGV family of brands. So we have a number of positives coming out of the quarter that leaves us optimistic. While we’re still a few quarters out from reaping the benefits of dialing up our activations over the last few months, I’m happy with the trends we’re currently seeing out of the business and our team’s execution, and we remain confident in our guidance for the year.

Turning to our integration efforts, let’s start with a quick update on Diamond. Through the end of the first quarter, we rebranded 36 properties representing over 9,600 or 2/3 of the total keys. We expect that we’ll rebrand 12 properties this year for an additional 2,500 keys, bringing us to over 70% of the total by year end. The remainder of the properties will be completed between 2025 and ‘26. We’re happy with the results of the rebrand thus far, but more importantly, our guests are happy. We continue to receive positive feedback and our occupancy levels and package sales trends remain strong at those rebranded resorts. We’re also making steady progress integrating our technology with several key module launchings this year that will move us toward a unified system for our deed and trust products, which will also leverage as we move through the Bluegreen integration process.

These enhancements will not only enable our sales teams to transition more seamlessly between product offerings, improving efficiency and the likelihood of conversion, but they’ll also enable us to seamlessly grow in the future. And importantly, they’ll also create a smoother customer experience helping owner’s engagement and retention. Moving to Bluegreen, as I mentioned, we’ve been working diligently to integrate our teams over the past several months. Throughout the process, I’ve been thoroughly impressed with the Bluegreen team at all levels of their organization. At the same time, we’ve been fully engaged in giant growth with our new partners, Bass Pro, Choice and NASCAR, and have also continued working toward finalizing our rebranding plans ahead of a kickoff later this year.

I also want to spend a minute talking about our new relationship that we announced a few weeks ago with Great Wolf Lodge. Partnerships are a critical component of our strategy to engage new customers and deepen the relationship with existing members through experiential offerings. And this partnership with Great Wolf furthers that proposition serving over 10 million guests annually with a focus on families with young children, which is a priority growth segment for us. Together, we’re able to engage a broader spectrum of vacations and age ranges, as well as provide HGV families with increased flexibility and their vacation options. In the coming months, HGV members will begin the vacation at Great Wolf Lodge Resorts using their club points, while also benefiting from exclusive discounts during their stay.

In addition, Great Wolf Lodge guests will have the opportunity to receive curated offers to explore HGV network of properties. HGV will have a presence in 18 Great Wolf Resorts with more locations to be added as Great Wolf continues their expansion. The partnership also includes call transfer and digital marketing programs enabling us to generate new lead flow across multiple channels. Above all, these partnerships are about bringing people together to create memorable experiences and I’m thrilled to be collaborating with CEO, John Murphy and the entire Great Wolf team who share a similar passion for hospitality and for delivering high quality vacations that bring families together. Now let’s take a look at our operational performance, assuming that we own Bluegreen for the entire quarter to make things simpler.

Combined contract sales, using that full quarter basis were $656 million with steady tour growth and a decline in VPG. Both HGV and Bluegreen demonstrated very similar growth trends for tours and VPG, and were largely in line with our expectations. As I mentioned earlier, I was very pleased with the trajectory of our tour flow as the quarter progressed along with the resilience of our owners, and as we move into the back half of the year, we expect to see our pipeline continue to drive improved tour trends as well. Combined, VPG for the full quarter was $3,575, down about 5% driven by lower close rates. However, close rates in our legacy business improved from the fourth quarter, leaving us optimistic that our efforts and initiatives are producing results and leave us on track for the year.

Looking at our four demand indicators, occupancy in the quarter was flat at 79%, although last year’s numbers included the full complement of Maui rooms. As I mentioned, we make great progress with our package activations this quarter, and our arrivals on the books for the rest of the year are ahead of ‘23 with strength in our marketing and rental arrivals owing to our success in driving increased package activations. Moving to our non-real estate segments, we continue to see great trends in our transient rental business led by higher available room nights and higher ADRs. Our rental nights on the books remained very strong through the rest of the year, and some regions where we had seen softer trends such as Orlando and Hawaii also showed signs of improvement this quarter, which also bodes well for future performance.

Aerial view of luxury beachfront vacation resorts that are owned by timeshare company.

In our recurring club and resort business NOG at our legacy business was 2%, and the addition of Bluegreen enabled us to reach a member count of 718,000, which led to another strong quarter of EBITDA generation. And our financing business had a solid quarter of growth with improved margins owing to the addition of the Bluegreen portfolio and good receivable generation. We also maintained our commitment to capital returns this quarter, repurchasing 2.3 million shares for $99 million. So all in all, I’m very pleased with this quarter. We performed in line with our expectations and our trends through the quarter, leave us optimistic that we’re on track to achieve our guidance for the year. More importantly, I think we’re really set up well for the long term.

I believe that we’re building the most talented team that we’ve ever had in my 25 years at HGV, and I’m excited to share our Bluegreen integration plans with you as we get them finalized. Before I turn it over to Dan, I’d like to congratulate him on being named President along with continuing his duties as CFO. He’s done a great job over these last five years, helping them navigate our business through markets that were turbulent at times, all while maintaining a commitment to shareholder value creation and risk management. And I know that he’ll continue to maximize the value of our business and financial model in the years ahead. So with that, I’ll turn it over to Dan and talk you through the numbers. Dan?

Dan Mathewes: Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. Before we start, note that our reported results for this quarter included $2 million of sales recognitions, which increased reported GAAP revenue and were related to opening the most recent phase of Sesoko project. We also recorded $1 million of associated direct expense recognitions. Adjusting for these two items would decrease the EBITDA reported in our press release by $3 million to $270 million. In my prepared remarks, I’ll only refer to metrics excluding net deferrals, which more accurately reflects the cash flow dynamics of our financial performance during the period. I’d also note that our results today also include the financial results of Bluegreen, which we acquired on January 17th.

Turning to our results for the quarter. Total revenue excluding cost reimbursements in the first quarter was $1.03 billion and adjusted EBITDA was $270 million with margins of 26%. Also excluding cost reimbursement. EBITDA included $11 million of Bluegreen cost synergies recognized during the quarter for a run rate of $53 million annualized, putting us nicely on the path of achieving a targeted $100 million of cost synergies within 24 months. Turning to our segments within real estate reported contract sales were $631 million for the quarter, including a partial quarter of Bluegreen ownership. Assuming that we own Bluegreen for the entire quarter, contract sales would’ve been $656 million versus pro-forma combined sales in the prior year of $692 million.

Bluegreen produced $161 million of that $656 million in sales on the full quarter basis. New buyers comprised 27% of legacy contract sales in the quarter, improving nearly 200 basis points from the fourth quarter level. Reported towards for the first quarter, were just over 174,000. Assuming a full quarter of Bluegreen ownership tours of 182,000 were roughly flat in the quarter on a pro-forma basis with owner tours, again growing in a solid mid-single-digit rate offset by a decline in new buyer tours. As Mark mentioned, the decision to pull back on some channels in the fourth quarter also had an effect on our tour pace in this quarter, but having re-accelerated our packages and our tour efforts in Q1, we do expect to see a benefit from those efforts later this year as they cycle through our marketing pipeline.

Bluegreen’s tours for the full first quarter of just under 52,000 displayed similar trends to our legacy business during the quarter with flattish growth and tours driven by low-single-digit owner tour growth offset by a similar level of decline in new prior tours. Reported VPG for the quarter was $3,600. Assuming a full quarter of Bluegreen ownership VPGs were $3,575. For a legacy business, VPG was about 6% ahead of 2019 levels roughly in line with the trend that we saw in the fourth quarter. As Mark mentioned, our expectation is that we move through this year, we’ll see an improvement in our VPG that will help to support low-single-digit growth in VPG for the full year. Reported cost of product was 11% of net DOI sales for the quarter, and our provision for bad debt as a percentage of owned contract sales was 12% in the quarter.

Real estate sales and marketing expense was 320 million for the quarter, or 51% in contract sales. Sales and marketing dollars and percentage were elevated in the quarter owing to seasonality along with the addition of Bluegreen. But we expect to see operating leverage on this expense as we begin to recognize additional cost synergies through this year. Real estate profit for the quarter was $131 million with margins of 26%. And our financing business first quarter revenue was $104 million and segment profit was $65 million, with margins of 63%. Interest income and segment profit for the quarter were impacted by $10 million contra revenue for the amortization of a non-cash premium associated with the portfolio of receivables that we acquired from Bluegreen in the acquisition in addition to the premium still being amortized for the diamond transaction.

Excluding this non-cash amortization, interest income was $112 million and margins were 69%. %. The bond gross receivables for the quarter were $3.8 billion or $2.9 billion net of allowance. Our originated portfolio weighted average interest rate was 15.1%. For context, our diamond acquired portfolio had a weighted average interest rate of 15.7% while our acquired Bluegreen portfolio had an average interest rate of 15.2%, our total allowance for bad debt was $900 million on that $3.8 billion receivables balance or 23.6% of the portfolio. We continue to evaluate the Bluegreen allowance through our purchase accounting process and any additional changes to the allowance we expect the flow through the balance sheet as an opening balance sheet item.

Our annualized default rate for our consolidated portfolios inclusive of Bluegreen stood at 9.7% for the quarter. As previously discussed, we continue to see normalizing credit trends with the termination of certain government stimulus plans, but we believe our current loan loss provision is adequate. Going forward, we expect our provision to migrate towards a mid-teens percentage of contract sales on a normalized basis. I also want to highlight our strong capital markets execution with our recent $240 million ABS deal of Bluegreen Legacy collateral. The deal highlights the strength of our brand and market position as we nearly quadrupled Bluegreen Vacation’s historical investor base on HGV’s first securitization of Bluegreen Vacation collateral.

The total coupon was 6.42%. In our resort and club business our consolidated member count was 718,000, and our legacy NOG was 2% at the end of the first quarter. Revenue was $166 million for the quarter, and segment profit was $112 million with margins of 68%. Rental and ancillary revenues were $181 million in the quarter with segment profit of $8 million and margins of 4% slightly ahead of last year. Revenue growth was driven by higher available room nights and RevPAR growth underpinned by continued travel demand. As Mark mentioned, we continue to see strong arrivals through the rest of the year, which should support the continuation of trends. Expenses on our legacy business continue to be elevated due to the inclusion of developer maintenance fees on unsold inventory, along with the inclusion of Bluegreen’s much lower margin rental business.

As you can see from the financial information we uploaded to the IR website last quarter, Bluegreen’s rental business ran at a loss, but we believe this provides us an opportunity for improvement over time as we integrate them into the Hilton system. Bridging the gap between segments adjusted EBITDA and total adjusted EBITDA corporate G&A was $35 million, license fees were $35 million. EBITDA from unconsolidated affiliates was $5 million, and EBITDA attributable to non-controlling interest was $3 million. Our adjusted free cash flow in the quarter was a use of $374 million, which included inventory spending of $105 million. I’d note that the cash flow usage this quarter was entirely the result of timing as we paid down the balances on our warehouse facility ahead of our most recent securitization, as well as to capture capital market synergies by closing multiple ADS facilities associated with the acquisition.

With the successful completion of that offering a few weeks ago and another one planned during the summer, we expect to see a cash flow benefit in the quarter, in the quarters ahead, and we’re still expecting an EBITDA conversion rate slightly ahead of last year’s 52%. During the quarter the company repurchased 2.3 million shares of common stock for $99 million and through April 30th, we repurchased an additional 1 million shares for 47 million, leaving us with $213 million of remaining availability under the 2023 repurchase plan. We expect to continue our current trend of approximately a hundred million dollars in share repurchases per quarter. Turning to our outlook, we are reiterating our guidance for full year adjusted EBITDA of $1.2 billion to $1.26 billion.

As of March 31st our liquidity position consisted of $355 million of unrestricted cash and $293 million of availability under our revolving credit facility. Our debt balance at quarter end was comprised of corporate debt of $5.1 billion and a non-recourse debt balance of approximately $1.5 billion. At quarter end, our legacy business had $460 million of remaining capacity in our warehouse facility, of which we had $455 million of notes available to securitize and another $321 million of mortgage notes we anticipate being eligible following certain customary milestones such as first payment, deeding, and recording. From a timing perspective, we expect to bring another deal to the market in the summer. Turning to our credit metrics at the end of Q1 and inclusive of all anticipated cost synergies, company’s total net leverage on a TTM basis was 3.74x.

We are also recommitting to our long-term leverage target of 2x to 3x total net leverage. We’ll now turn the call over to the operator and look forward to your questions. Operator?

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Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Patrick Scholes with Truist Securities.

Patrick Scholes : The first question concerns the Bluegreen acquisition. You have about four months of your belt. Now, how would you say that’s tracking versus your underwriting? And then related to that you initially had expected about $100 million of expected cost synergies and then expected $75 million through $100 million of future revenue synergies. Do those seem realistic at this point? Maybe too conservative? How are you tracking and thinking about all of those?

Mark Wang : Yes, sure, Patrick. So first of all, we closed quickly, right? We closed in January. So we’ve spent the last or the first couple months really refining our plans and we’re really pleased with the progress and remain excited about the opportunities ahead. The main elements of the integration will be similar to the Diamond deal cost savings rebranding of our sales centers and properties and integrating them into the overall HGV system. And then there’s that the partnership piece, which is really a new element of the deal that Diamond didn’t bring. So on the cost side, we’ve moved to execution phase beginning of March and we’re sitting here today, we’ve achieved nearly half of the $100 million cost target on a run rate basis.

So we feel really confident there. The rebranding of the sales centers will come first, followed by the properties over the next number of years. And remember we’re still rebranding Diamond properties with I mentioned it in prepared remarks. We — I think we have more than 10 planned for this year. And similar to what we did with DRI, it’s going to take some time for us to design the roll out for HGV Max, which is — as you would call, as our membership program. We’re excited about that, but it will take some time. We have ultimate access and it’s really around working through some of the technology developments and legal requirements there. So made great progress on the partnership front. Very, very excited about the opportunity with Bass Pro.

We had our board up there yesterday. We had our board meeting up there and we had a chance to meet with the founder and the Bass Pro management team. They’re very engaged and we’re very engaged and very aligned to growing that relationship. So, but anyway, so taken together, I think the Bluegreen membership, the new distribution, significant pipeline, we’re very excited about the revenue opportunities ahead. So all in all feel really good. And I’ll just add one last thing. We’ve been very pleased with the team members that we’ve inherited or we’ve brought on board from Bluegreen. They’ve got a great culture and we’ve seen that across the business.

Dan Mathewes: And I think, Patrick, the only thing to add there, just getting back to one of your initial questions with the Diamond transaction, when we announced it, we said, hey, cost synergies of $125 million plus. So we always thought there was a little bit more room there. The contrast that just from a context perspective for Bluegreen, we’ve always said a run rate target of $100 million. It’s a smaller organization. We — to Mark’s earlier point, we are at a run rate even through Q1 of just over or just about half of that run rate and embedded in our guidance is realized synergies with the year within 2024, $50 million to $55 million. So we’re definitely on the right track. We’re very confident we’re going to get to the $100 million, but we’re also doing full evaluation of the talent and making sure that we have the right people in the right places to execute everything we need to execute on.

So I would say we’re comfortable with the $100 million, we’re confident we’re going to get there but it’s not the same element that Diamond was. So I wouldn’t look for us in the next couple quarters to go, it’s going to move from $100 million to $110 million. We’re right now very much focused on achieving the $100 million target.

Patrick Scholes : My follow up question is on Maui. Mark, could you give us an update on how things are progressing there? And did you mention if there was an earnings impact in the quarter? And also if you could again, talk about how you see the rest of the year progressing for you folks?

Mark Wang : Yes, sure. Look, thankful, we’re very fortunate neither of our properties sustained any physical damage. And our Maui Bayville property is up on the space is in South Maui. So that is on the other side of the island, we’re operating normal and trends are continuing to improve, the Kano Poly beach property, which is on the west side near the epicenter of the worst damage. Operations are still impacted. We have some team members, FEMA and aid workers still staying within the property. So we said previously we think occupancy will come back by the end of this year, but sales recovery will lag and sales recovery is less about occupancy. Because occupancy now in Maui is around 90%, so slightly below our historical, mid historical levels, which are usually in the mid to upper 90, despite the headwinds.

So x the impact of the wildfire, Maui would’ve been around $90 million in sales in ‘23. And we’re still down almost 15% versus prior year in Q1. So we expect roughly the same in Q2. We’re expecting that the recovery, the build, rift is really going to build in the second half of the year, but still below our trajectory, pre-fire. So we expect to be fully back in 2025.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Brandt Montour with Barclays.

Brandt Montour: Mark, I was hoping you could elaborate a little bit more on sort of the consumer right and what you saw improve throughout the first quarter in terms of close rates? It sounds like, there were some tweaks that you made. There might have been a little bit of mixed shift benefit from new owner tours to repeat owner tours. But if you strip all that out, what’s the sort of sequential movement in hesitancy at the sales tale? We all know that interest rates and inflation are high and dragging on some consumers. So maybe you could opine on that, please.

Mark Wang : The positive news is we’ve seen stabilization, right? And when you look at the traffic continues to be good in its building. All in all, I think around the consumer, there’s some uncertainty around the margin, but it isn’t trending negatively and the behavior isn’t really any different than what we’ve seen through previous cycles. New buyers have pulled back more than owners and that makes sense, right? Owners have lived the value proposition, they’ve made a commitment and they’ve been committed for a number of years. And I’d say across the segment with the type of equality a customer, we’re engaged with, it’s less about income. It’s more really about the uncertainty. They’re reading the news every day as we are and that’s pushed up a bit of hesitancy for this type of purchase.

But on the other side, the good news is we have a lot of visibility on the traffic in our sales centers and control over tour flow. So that’s a lever that we’ve opened up and we’re growing tours, while maintaining the quality of the consumer based on FICO and income and net worth. So I think we’re also much better positioned today Brent with our broader portfolio, including all the drive to destinations and a much more affordable entry point. All in all, we’re very focused on continuing to promote the value proposition of the product and the experiential aspect of our club to our members. Basically we’re seeing stabilization, we’re seeing some improvement and we’ll ramp tour flow as we go through the year.

Brandt Montour: And then maybe for Dan, and I apologize, it’s in your prepared remarks. You may have answered this to some extent, but in loan loss provisions, I think I asked this question last quarter. We’ve been sort of waiting for this loan loss provision to move up toward this more punitive level of long-term target. And it looks like in the first quarter it may have maybe take taken a step back a little bit quarter-over-quarter, and I know this is now including Bluegreen for a couple months. And again, we thought Bluegreen would’ve again pressed — pushed that number higher and so what’s the reason for that and sort of how should we think about that line going forward?

Dan Mathewes: It seems, like I’ve been talking about this for a couple years now. Ultimately, we do anticipate it to escalate to that mid-teens range. If you look year-over-year there’s a lot of factors that come into play with the actual absolute dollar amount. How many people, what’s the propensity to borrow? How much are they actually mortgaging, et cetera? If you look from a pure rate perspective year-over-year, it was detrimental for the quarter. It probably cost us around circa $10 million. So we are seeing some level of elevation. I mean, it was 12% of contract tours. We talked about it going from an average last year of 10 to an average this year of 13. And I think we’re seeing some of that escalation and we’re kind of right on track with that.

So it’s pretty consistent with headwind we talked about last quarter, when we were thinking about headwinds hitting us this year that $100 million number, a big chunk of that was associated with bad debt. The balance was COP and some other nuances with license fees, et cetera. But, the majority was the bad debt. And we are seeing some of that movement. Now that being said, some items are still performing far better than what they were pre-acquisition. And most notably, it’s still the Diamond paper. The Diamond paper had an annualized default rate close to, depending on the quarter that you’re looking at, but back in ‘19 it was between 17% and 19%. And that is still holding very strong from an improvement standpoint at well, depending on the quarter, it’s between 11% and 12%.

So significant improvement over pre-acquisition levels. And then when you look at the HGV side, it’s fairly consistent, slightly higher than 2019 levels. So all in all, we feel pretty good and we’re pretty confident that ultimately as we run the business, it will land in that circa 15% of contract of owned contract sales level.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Lambert with JP Morgan.

Ryan Lambert: Just wanted to tease out the impact of Bluegreen a little bit more. Did the weather have any sort of impact during the quarter, just given that owner base is a little bit more drive to in nature?

Mark Wang : Yes, there was a little bit of impact. I think really the bigger impact probably is first of all a lot of excitement from the Bluegreen members and the team members, around the acquisition of Hilton. And I think what we’re seeing though and very much like what we saw with DRI, we are seeing some — we’re seeing some maybe hesitation or anticipation of what the rollout of and what the combination of Hilton means to the Bluegreen members. And, so they’re excited. They love our brand. But right now we are not introducing any of the Hilton or Hilton Grand Vacations or HGV max elements to the program right now. So there’s that anticipation right now. And so that I think is going to cause a little bit of hesitancy, until we work through that. And that’s really more technology driven and legal driven and we expect that we’re going to be able to announce that connection probably as we move into the fourth quarter of this year.

Ryan Lambert: And if we can switch gears real quick to the fee for service business, I think it came in a bit lower than we — and I think the street was, we’re modeling. So how should we think about that business for the balance of the year?

Dan Mathewes: Sure. On a pro-forma basis, if you were look at 2023, because there is a little bit of fee for service business at Bluegreen already, but on a pro-forma basis for 2023, fee for service accounted for about 24% annualized from a contract sales perspective, it’s down to 16% in Q1. And what I would tell you is to assume the same level for the balance of the year. Just given the mix of the product that we have available to us. There shouldn’t be a lot of movement in that throughout 2024.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Ben Chaiken with Mizuho.

Benjamin Chaiken : Regarding Bluegreen, just back to one of the previous comments, I think you mentioned there was some anticipation/hesitation from the Bluegreen owners. Just to confirm, I think you were saying prior to introducing Max, there’s some technical and legal items. Did I catch that right? Maybe just explain maybe a little bit, if possible, what those are? And then once connected in 4Q, assuming I called all that right, will there be an active outreach or can you help us think about when you may start to see some of that sales leverage? I’m not sure if there’s a delay. And then kind of related to that on Bass Pro, any color on how you may change or improve that experience from an in-store perspective to better leverage the Max product that’s now available? Then I have one quick follow-up.

Mark Wang : Yes, sure, Ben. I’ll try to make this a little clearer. So, first of all, very excited about the opportunity with Bluegreen and their members. They’re very excited about the announcement. And historically, Bluegreen has not upgraded their members to the same degree as HGV or the industry more broadly. And when we launched HGV Max with DRI, we now have nearly 160,000 Max members now. We’re confident that the brand, the Hilton benefits expanded portfolio, the new experiences are going to resonate really well with the Bluegreen members. We saw that with DRI and we saw it with our HGV members. And we’re working hard on designing the program and getting it ready for launch, but it will take some time before we can offer it to the Bluegreen owner base.

And as we saw with Diamond, we know there’s a lot of demand and Bluegreen base is excited about it. So we have some technology, work that we have to do. And more importantly, we have some legal work and some legal structuring work we had to do. Same thing happened with Diamond. It took a number of quarters to get there. Our expectations right now is a rollout beginning of the fourth quarter, may come a little earlier, may come a little later. We’re not a 100% sure. But all I can assure you that all the teams are working toward that. And our expectations is, we’ll see a nice bump up in activity and transactions, similar to the way we saw with DRI when that occurs.

Dan Mathewes : And Ben, just the only thing I would add is, as you would imagine and as Mark alluded to just now, we’ve seen this before. This is exactly how we walked through it with Diamond. So as you would expect, this was all built into our underwrite when we acquired Bluegreen. So Q4 is not a delay. It’s where we actually expected to start rolling this out, right around that timeframe anyway, it actually may have been a hair later, but in any case, it was all included in our underwrite of the deal.

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