HTHT

Prezzo Huazhu Group Ltd

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HTHT
$50,92
-$0,72(-1,39%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-04 04:44 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-04 04:44, Huazhu Group Ltd (HTHT) is priced at $50,92, with a total market cap of $15,63B, a P/E ratio of 20,44, and a dividend yield of 4,12%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $50,74 and $52,07. The current price is 0,35% above the day's low and 2,20% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 627,96K. Over the past 52 weeks, HTHT has traded between $49,34 to $56,46, and the current price is -9,81% away from the 52-week high.

HTHT Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$51,64
Market Cap$15,63B
Volume627,96K
P/E Ratio20,44
Dividend Yield (TTM)4,12%
Dividend Amount$1,28
Diluted EPS (TTM)1,65
Net Income (FY)$4,94B
Revenue (FY)$24,61B
Earnings Date2026-05-19
EPS Estimate0,46
Revenue Estimate$834,45M
Shares Outstanding302,85M
Beta (1Y)0.154
Ex-Dividend Date2026-05-04
Dividend Payment Date2026-05-20

About HTHT

H World Group Limited, together with its subsidiaries, develops leased and owned, manachised, and franchised hotels primarily in the People's Republic of China. The company operates hotels under its own brands, such as HanTing Hotel, Ni Hao Hotel, Hi Inn, Elan Hotel, Zleep Hotels, Ibis Hotel, JI Hotel, Orange Hotel, Starway Hotel, Ibis Styles Hotel, CitiGO Hotel, Crystal Orange Hotel, IntercityHotel, Manxin Hotel, Mercure Hotel, Madison Hotel, Novotel Hotel, Joya Hotel, Blossom House, Steigenberger Hotels & Resorts, MAXX by Steigenberger, Jaz in the City, Grand Mercure, Steigenberger Icon, and Song Hotels. As of June 30, 2022, it operated 8,176 hotels with 773,898 rooms. The company was formerly known as Huazhu Group Limited and changed its name to H World Group Limited in June 2022. H World Group Limited was founded in 2005 and is headquartered in Shanghai, the People's Republic of China.
SectorConsumer Cyclical
IndustryTravel Lodging
CEOHui Jin
HeadquartersShanghai,None,CN
Official Websitehttps://ir.hworld.com
Employees (FY)1,00M
Average Revenue (1Y)$24,61K
Net Income per Employee$4,94K

Huazhu Group Ltd (HTHT) FAQ

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Huazhu Group Ltd (HTHT) is currently trading at $50,92, with a 24h change of -1,39%. The 52-week trading range is $49,34–$56,46.

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Hot Posts su Huazhu Group Ltd (HTHT)

PuzzledScholar

PuzzledScholar

04-29 15:48
Looking back at the companies that had their IPO in 2010, it's pretty interesting how different that market was. We barely saw 100 deals that year compared to the 300-400 we'd normally get in boom times. Market uncertainty was everywhere, so a lot of companies that wanted to go public just got pulled at the last second. But here's what caught my attention - even with all that chaos, some of the companies that had their IPO in 2010 absolutely crushed it. We're talking 50%, 100%, even 200% gains from their offering price. That's the kind of performance that makes you think the market might be ready to move again. The thing most people don't realize is that you don't need to jump in on day one. Back in the dot-com days, yeah, hot IPOs would moon immediately. But these days? Almost every single one of these companies that had their IPO in 2010 came out pretty quiet and only started moving weeks or months later. So there's actually time to do your homework before jumping in. Let me break down some of the wild ones. Motricity (MOTR) looked solid on mobile software demand, but it ran from $7.50 to $17 on pure momentum. Sure, sales were supposed to grow 30% in 2011, but the market was pricing in way more than that. Same story with Molycorp (MCP) - it doubled on China rare earth metal supply fears, but people ignored that rare earth mining exists everywhere else too. Now it's valued at $2.5 billion with no real revenue in sight. Qlik Technologies (QLIK) also got ahead of itself after doubling. The growth story looked great until you actually looked at the numbers - sales growth had been decelerating for three years before they went public. Trading at 60x forward earnings? That's asking for trouble. Some plays like HiSoft Technologies (HSFT) and China Lodging (HTHT) only make sense if you're thinking long-term on China's development. China Lodging specifically is expensive at 50x 2011 profits. It'd be way more attractive after a stumble. But Jinko Solar (JKS) stood out. Even after a 250% gain, it still looked reasonably priced at around 7x forward earnings. Most other solar stocks had already exploded, so Jinko had one of the lowest multiples in the group. That one actually looked like it had room to run. The rest of these companies that had their IPO in 2010 were probably due for a pullback. Momentum was doing the heavy lifting, and once that unwound, some of these could've made for good short opportunities. The real lesson? Don't chase IPOs on day one. Wait for the dust to settle and actually look at the numbers.
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