
The FIFA World Cup 2026 is underway, and outside of the competition on the pitch, the competition for consumer dollars may be equally intense. Official estimates forecast U.S. accommodations and food services generating over $2.4 billion in incremental economic value from the tournament.
That number includes 21.3 million hotel room nights expected across the three host countries: the United States, Canada, and Mexico. On a granular level, FIFA and the World Trade Organization (WTO) have projected international travelers will stay an average of 12 days, attend roughly two matches each, and spend over $400 per day.
World Cup demand is one reason many hotel stocks have made a strong run this year. However, some of those stocks may present valuation concerns. A better option may be to look at full-service hotel REITs (real estate investment trusts) as direct, quantifiable beneficiaries.
Analysts have specifically flagged Host Hotels & Resorts (NASDAQ: HST), Park Hotels & Resorts (NYSE: PK), and Ryman Hospitality Properties (NYSE: RHP) as having meaningful revenue exposure to World Cup markets. Each carries a different risk profile that may not be reflected in their respective stock charts.
Host Hotels & Resorts: The Momentum Leader
Host Hotels & Resorts has a concrete, named World Cup tie-in that the other companies on this list lack. Fairmont Mayakoba, one of its managed properties in Mexico, was officially selected to house national team delegations during the tournament. Management also specifically called out World Cup-related transient demand as a catalyst when it raised full-year 2026 guidance for comparable hotel RevPAR and EBITDAre earlier this year.
HST is up 40% in 2026 and over 30% in the three months ending June 17. It’s also trading slightly above its consensus price target of $23.75. It’s fair to wonder if the biggest gains are priced in, especially with HST looking expensive by many conventional metrics.
HST has been in a steady, persistent uptrend since November, with price climbing from approximately $16 to nearly $25.
The 50-day SMA at $22.08 has been reliably ascending, and price has stayed above it cleanly. MACD is bullish with the line above the signal, but the histogram is narrowing slightly.
Of the three, HST's chart looks the most technically healthy—it's the momentum leader without a parabolic overshoot risk.

Park Hotels & Resorts: The High-Risk, High-Reward Play
Park Hotels & Resorts is a Hilton spinoff with a portfolio concentrated in urban markets, several of which are active World Cup host cities.
That direct city-level exposure is the core of the bull thesis here. The stock is up roughly 30% from its May lows and is trading well above its consensus price target of $12.68.
That means the World Cup tailwind may already be largely reflected in the price.
PK also has the most dramatic chart. The stock was essentially rangebound between $10–$12 for most of the past year, then exploded higher in late May/early June, nearly a 30% move in a matter of weeks.
The 50-day SMA at $11.93 is still ascending but hasn't caught up to price at $14.64 at all, which shows how vertical that move was.
MACD is sharply positive, but the histogram is already starting to shrink, which is worth watching. That kind of parabolic move often consolidates or pulls back before continuing.

Ryman Hospitality Properties: The Indirect Play With Real Exposure
Rather than broad urban hotel portfolios, Ryman Hospitality Partners owns the Gaylord Hotels brand. That means massive convention and entertainment resorts in markets including Nashville, Dallas, Denver, and Washington D.C.
Its Gaylord Texan property sits in the Dallas market, which is hosting a World Cup semifinal. Dallas is one of the highest-demand World Cup markets in the country. RHP carries a consensus Buy rating, though at $123; it is trading above its consensus price target around $122.
RHP has the cleanest uptrend of the three. Price has been steadily climbing since its April low near $95, now at $123 and well above the 50-day SMA at $109. The MACD is still bullish (line above signal), but the histogram bars are flattening, which suggests momentum is cooling after a strong run. Not a reversal signal yet, more of a "extended and catching its breath" setup.

Is It Too Late to Get in on This Trade?
As noted above, each stock has made strong gains this year, and each is starting to show technical signals that momentum is slowing. But each company also shows consistency in revenue that isn’t event driven.
That fits with recent data from Accio that shows Baby Boomers and the wealthiest U.S. households are not planning to cut back on travel and entertainment spending and, in some cases, are expected to increase it, especially in luxury and experience-based segments, which fit nicely with the business model of these REITs.
For investors considering these names, the question is whether patient investors are better served waiting for a technical pullback toward the 50-day SMA on any of the three before adding exposure, rather than chasing extended moves that are already well ahead of analyst consensus.
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The article "3 Hotel REITs Poised to Benefit from the World Cup" first appeared on MarketBeat.