IHG's Latin America Bet Just Got a New Quarterback. Here's What It Tells You.
IHG just installed a 30-year company veteran to run its Mexico, Latin America, and Caribbean operation... and what looks like a routine leadership swap is actually a tell about where the real growth pressure is coming from.
Every time a major brand reshuffles a regional leader, the press release says the same thing. "Tremendous opportunity." "Next phase of growth." "Important moment." You could swap the names and dates from any brand announcement in the last decade and nobody would notice. But here's what caught my eye about this one... IHG didn't go outside for this hire. They pulled a guy who's been with the company since 1996 and just finished running 120 managed hotels in Greater China. That's not a talent search. That's a deployment. And when a company deploys its heaviest artillery to a region, it's because something needs to happen there. Fast.
Let's talk about the math. IHG has 295 open hotels in the MLAC region with 104 in the pipeline. That pipeline number represents roughly 35% of the existing footprint... which is aggressive by any standard. And on the Q4 2025 earnings call, IHG reported RevPAR growth of 4% outside the U.S., with Mexico and the Latin America/Caribbean subregion specifically called out as contributors. Global gross system growth hit 6.6% last year with 443 hotel openings. The machine is running hot. But a pipeline is just a list until somebody converts it to keys, and 104 properties don't open themselves.
I've seen this play out before. A brand identifies a high-growth region, stacks the pipeline with LOIs and signings, then realizes execution is a completely different animal than development. The deals get done in conference rooms. The hotels get built (or converted) in markets where construction timelines slip, where local regulations surprise you, where the labor pool doesn't look anything like what the pro forma assumed. I knew a regional VP once who told me his biggest lesson from Latin America expansion was that "everything takes 30% longer and costs 20% more than headquarters thinks it will." He wasn't complaining. He was just describing physics. The fact that IHG is putting someone with Greater China managed-hotel experience into this seat tells me they know the conversion-heavy growth model (57% of global room openings in H1 2025 were conversions) requires an operator's hand, not just a developer's Rolodex.
Here's the part that matters if you're paying attention to the luxury and lifestyle push. IHG has announced plans to add 32 new hotels across its six luxury and lifestyle brands in this region. That's where the margin is, obviously... but it's also where the execution risk is highest. You can convert a Holiday Inn Express in Monterrey and the operational playbook is pretty well established. You try to deliver a voco or a Vignette Collection property in a secondary Latin American market, and suddenly you're building a service culture from scratch with a brand standard that was designed in a boardroom in Atlanta or London. The gap between what the brand deck promises and what the Tuesday afternoon shift can deliver... that gap is where owners get hurt.
The real question nobody's asking is whether IHG's fee structure in MLAC justifies the brand premium for owners in these markets. When conversions are your primary growth engine, you need owners who believe the flag is worth the cost. And in a region where independent operators have strong local brands and deep community ties, that value proposition has to be airtight. If you're an owner in Mexico or the Caribbean being courted by IHG right now, this leadership change is your moment to negotiate. New regional leadership means new relationships, new priorities, and a window where the brand needs wins on the board more than it needs to hold the line on terms. That window doesn't stay open long.
If you're an owner or GM at an IHG-flagged property in Latin America or the Caribbean, pick up the phone this month. New regional leadership always means a reset... and the first 90 days are when you have the most leverage to get PIP timelines reconsidered, fee conversations reopened, or capital commitments addressed. If you're an independent being pitched a conversion right now, slow down. Ask for actual performance data from comparable IHG properties in your market, not projections. And make them show you the loyalty contribution numbers... not the system-wide average, but properties that look like yours. The 104-property pipeline tells you IHG needs deals. Use that.