IHG Just Beat Every Q1 Estimate. Your Property Probably Didn't.
IHG posted 4.4% global RevPAR growth in Q1, blowing past the 3.3% consensus, with groups up 7% and business up 6%. The question every GM should be asking isn't whether the brand is winning... it's whether your property is getting its share.
I worked with a GM once who had a ritual every time the parent company released a strong quarterly report. He'd print it out, highlight the system-wide RevPAR number, then pull up his own STR report and set them side by side on his desk. Most quarters, the gap between the portfolio number and his property's number was the most honest performance review he'd ever get. Nobody from corporate was going to hand it to him that way. He had to build it himself.
IHG's Q1 numbers are genuinely strong. 4.4% RevPAR growth globally when the street was expecting 3.3%. Occupancy up a point and a half to 62.7%. ADR climbed 2%. And the mix story is the part that matters most if you're actually running one of these hotels... group revenue up 7%, business transient up 6%, leisure barely moving at 1%. That's a demand composition shift. If your property is still built around a leisure-heavy strategy from 2022 and 2023, the tide just moved and you might be standing on the wrong part of the beach.
Here's what caught my eye. The U.S. posted 3.4% RevPAR growth after three consecutive quarters of declines. That's not a typo. Three quarters of going backward, and now a reversal. The CFO says they haven't seen any indication of a business travel slowdown despite fuel costs ticking up. Maybe. But "haven't seen any indication" is a very specific phrase. It means "we're watching for it and it hasn't shown up yet." That's not the same as "it won't happen." The Middle East tells you how fast things can turn... IHG went from +9% RevPAR growth in January and February to -26% in March in that region. One month. That's the speed at which the world changes now.
The development machine keeps grinding. Over a million rooms across 7,014 hotels globally. Net system size up 5%. Pipeline sitting at 343,000 rooms. And here's the number that should make every existing franchisee pause... 53% of Q1 signings were conversions. More than half of IHG's growth is coming from hotels that already exist, slapping on a new flag, and entering your comp set. That Garner conversion brand just landed in China. The Noted Collection just signed its first deal in EMEAA. Ruby is heading stateside. Every one of those conversions becomes somebody's new competitor. Meanwhile, IHG is buying back $950 million in stock this year and returning over $1.2 billion to shareholders. The brand is doing very well. The question, as always, is whether that prosperity flows down to property level or stays at headquarters. This is what I call the National Number Trap. IHG's 4.4% is a weather report. Your comp set is the forecast that actually determines whether you make plan this quarter.
The stock hit a record high after this report. Trading at roughly 31 times earnings. Wall Street loves the asset-light model because the math is clean... franchise fees in, shareholder returns out, and the property-level capital risk sits with someone else. That someone else is you. So before you forward the press release to your owner with a note that says "look how well the brand is doing," make sure your own numbers tell the same story. Because your owner is going to read this and assume the rising tide lifted your boat too. If it didn't, you'd better know why before anyone asks.
Pull your STR report from Q1 right now and put it next to these system-wide numbers. If IHG posted 3.4% RevPAR growth in the U.S. and you came in below that, you've got a positioning problem, a comp set problem, or both... and you need to diagnose which one before your next ownership review. More urgently, look at your demand mix. Groups up 7% and business up 6% system-wide means the brands that are winning right now are winning on those segments. If your group and BT production is flat or declining while the portfolio is surging, your sales effort needs recalibration this month, not next quarter. And if you're in a market where one of those 53% conversion signings just planted a new IHG flag three miles from your front door, get ahead of it. Map the impact on your comp set, adjust your rate strategy, and bring the analysis to your owner before they stumble across it in a pipeline report.