The ICA gave a "state of the industry" presentation at the show and they had some interesting data. If I understood it correctly there is a projected downturn in new construction projects coming based on optimism of equipment manufacturers. Anticipated interest rate cuts have been postponed and that has given some people pause.
Some are still building aggressively with a plan to sell to larger PE groups. But some of the big chains have paid too much and developed too fast and as a result have closed some sites or scaled back development. Development costs have risen, and EBITDA multiple have dropped a bit too, making that a more challenging path for wash flippers.
I know at least one chain were using a sale-leaseback arrangement that was working well when interest rates were low. If you could gather the resources and develop a wash four 4 million, then sell it to a real estate investor for 6 million and offer to lease back for 300K per year, you could make a ton of money just on that model., Your operations don't have to wildly profitable, you just have to keep the party going and the washes cash flowing. This was working great when rates were low and real estate investors sitting on cash were happy to get a 5% return. I'm not sure how many will be buying with thirty years treasuries yielding 4.5%. If that chain went belly up they have likely already made a killing, and the grandma that wanted a safe 5% return will be left holding the bag.
Anyway, I feel like construction of new washes will continue, but with normalized interest rates the overbuilding will slow down. The express tunnel/
membership model is obviously still the trend for the near future.