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IHG's $950M Buyback Is a Bet Against Its Own Hotels

IHG is on pace to return $5 billion to shareholders over five years while U.S. RevPAR sits flat. The math tells you exactly where management thinks the real money is... and it's not in the hotels.

IHG's $950M Buyback Is a Bet Against Its Own Hotels

IHG repurchased 20,000 shares on March 10 at an average price of $131.75, one daily tranche of a reported $950 million buyback program. That program, combined with ordinary dividends, puts 2026 shareholder returns above $1.2 billion on reported figures. Cumulative returns from 2022 through 2026 are reported to exceed $5 billion.

Let's decompose this. IHG's reported 2025 adjusted EPS grew 16%. Global RevPAR grew 1.5%. U.S. RevPAR was flat. Greater China declined 1.6%. The earnings growth isn't coming from hotel performance. It's coming from fee margin expansion, system growth (443 hotel openings, a record), and the mechanical effect of reducing share count. When you buy back shares while earnings hold steady, EPS goes up without a single additional guest walking through a lobby door. That's not operating improvement. That's financial engineering.

The real number here is the gap between what IHG returns to shareholders and what flows back to the properties generating those fees. IHG's system now exceeds 6,963 hotels and 1 million rooms. The owners of those rooms funded that system through franchise fees, loyalty assessments, technology mandates, and PIP capital. IHG takes those fees, posts strong operating profit (up 13% in 2025 on reported figures), and routes the surplus into share cancellations that benefit equity holders. The owner running a 180-key select-service with flat RevPAR and rising labor costs doesn't see a dollar of that $950 million. The owner IS the dollar.

A portfolio I analyzed years ago had this exact profile... franchisor posting record returns, franchisees posting flat NOI. The management company was thriving. The owners were treading water. Same P&L, two completely different stories depending on which line you stop reading at. IHG's balance sheet makes this tension visible if you look: negative equity, elevated debt, and a P/E in the range of 30. They're borrowing against future fee streams to buy back stock today. That works beautifully in a stable-to-growing fee environment. It gets uncomfortable fast if system growth slows or owners start questioning whether 15-20% total brand cost is justified by flat domestic RevPAR.

Morgan Stanley reportedly raised its price target to $145. The consensus is "Moderate Buy." For IHG shareholders, the math works. For IHG franchisees, the question is what "works" means when your franchisor has $5 billion to return to Wall Street and your PIP estimate just came in 20% over budget.

Operator's Take

Here's what nobody's telling you... when your brand parent announces a billion-dollar-plus buyback, that money came from somewhere. It came from your fees. If you're a franchised owner sitting on flat RevPAR and a PIP deadline, pull your total brand cost as a percentage of revenue. All of it... franchise fees, loyalty, tech, marketing, reservation fees. If that number is north of 15% and your loyalty contribution isn't justifying it, you need to have a very direct conversation with your franchise rep. Not next quarter. This month. The math doesn't lie... they're getting richer while you're running in place.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: IHG
🌍 Greater China 📊 Holiday Inn Express 📊 Loyalty Programs 📊 Property Improvement Plan (PIP) 🌍 United States 📊 Earnings per share (EPS) 📊 Franchise Fees 🏢 IHG 📊 RevPAR 📊 Share buyback
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.