Today · Apr 2, 2026
IHG's $1.2 Billion Shareholder Return Tells You Exactly Who's Getting Paid

IHG's $1.2 Billion Shareholder Return Tells You Exactly Who's Getting Paid

IHG stock is wobbling on short-term sentiment while the company funnels $1.2 billion back to shareholders in 2026. The real number isn't the stock price. It's the fee margin expansion that makes those buybacks possible.

IHG's fee margin grew 360 basis points in 2025. That single number matters more than any "inflection" a trading algorithm identified in the stock chart. Adjusted operating profit hit $1,265 million, up 12.5% year over year, on global RevPAR growth of just 1.6% in Q4. Read that again. Revenue per available room barely moved. Profit surged. That's the asset-light model working exactly as designed... for the franchisor.

The company opened a record 443 hotels in 2025 and added 694 to the pipeline. Net system growth of 4.7%. Nearly 2,300 hotels in the pipeline representing 33% future rooms growth. Every one of those signings generates franchise fees, loyalty assessments, reservation system charges, technology mandates, and marketing contributions. IHG's adjusted EBITDA climbed to $1,332 million. And where did that cash go? $270 million in dividends. $900 million in share buybacks. Another $950 million buyback program launched for 2026. The company has returned over $1.1 billion to shareholders in 2025 and expects to exceed $1.2 billion in 2026.

Let's decompose who's actually earning what. IHG's fee margin (now well above 60%) means the company keeps more than sixty cents of every fee dollar after its own costs. The owner paying those fees is operating on GOP margins that have been compressed by labor inflation, insurance increases, and brand-mandated capital expenditures. I audited a management company once that was celebrating "record fee revenue" in the same quarter three of its managed properties missed debt service. Same industry. Two completely different financial realities depending on which line you stop reading at.

The midscale concentration is the strategic bet worth watching. Over 80% of IHG's U.S. portfolio sits in midscale brands... Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, avid, Garner. Analysts project this segment growing from $14 billion to $18 billion by 2030 in the U.S. alone. That's where the pipeline is pointed. The Ruby acquisition for $116 million (projected to generate $8 million in incremental fee revenue by 2028) is a rounding error on the balance sheet but signals the lifestyle play IHG wants without the capital intensity of building it organically. $116 million for a brand platform is cheap if the conversion pipeline materializes. It's expensive if Ruby becomes another flag in a portfolio that already has 19 brands competing for the same developer attention.

The stock falling 2.44% over ten days while IHG actively repurchases shares through Goldman Sachs (76,481 shares on March 19 alone at roughly $131) tells you management thinks the price is wrong. Analyst targets range from $115 to $160 with a consensus "Moderate Buy." The trading algorithms see "weak near-term sentiment." The balance sheet sees a company generating $1.3 billion in EBITDA with a 2.3x net debt ratio and enough cash flow to buy back nearly a billion in stock annually. Those are two different conversations. Only one of them matters to the person who owns a Holiday Inn Express and is about to receive the next PIP letter.

Operator's Take

Here's what nobody's telling you... IHG's 360-basis-point fee margin expansion means the brand is getting more efficient at collecting from you while your cost to deliver their standard keeps climbing. If you're an IHG-flagged owner, pull your total brand cost as a percentage of revenue right now. Franchise fees, loyalty assessments, reservation charges, technology mandates, marketing contributions, PIP capital... all of it. If that number exceeds 15% and your loyalty contribution is under 30%, you need to have that conversation with your asset manager before the next franchise review. The math doesn't lie. The question is whether the math works for the person signing the franchise agreement or just the person collecting the fee.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: IHG
Choice Hotels' $0.29 Dividend Tells You More About Capital Strategy Than Leadership

Choice Hotels' $0.29 Dividend Tells You More About Capital Strategy Than Leadership

Choice declared its first quarterly dividend at $0.2875 per share, yielding 1.1%, while swapping general counsels. One of these things matters for shareholders. The other is a press release.

$0.2875 per share. That's Choice Hotels' new quarterly dividend, annualized to $1.15, yielding roughly 1.1% at current prices. The payout ratio lands around 14.5% against 2025 diluted EPS of $7.90. That's not a dividend. That's a rounding error dressed up as a capital return event.

Let's decompose this. Choice returned $190 million to shareholders in 2025. $136 million went to buybacks. $54 million went to dividends. The ratio tells you everything about management's actual priorities. They've retired over 55% of outstanding shares since 2004. The buyback IS the capital return program. The dividend is the garnish. An owner I spoke with last year put it perfectly: "They're paying me a dividend with one hand and telling me to reinvest with the other. I just want to know which hand to watch." Watch the buyback hand.

The 2026 outlook projects adjusted EBITDA of $632M to $647M and adjusted EPS of $6.92 to $7.14. That EPS range is flat to slightly down from 2025's $6.94 adjusted figure. Flat guidance with a new dividend commitment means something has to give. Either the buyback pace slows, or they're betting on the top end of that EBITDA range. Four analysts rate CHH a sell. Nine say hold. Two say buy. The average 12-month price target is $111.93. The market is not calling this a game changer (the headline's word, not mine).

The general counsel transition is internal. Twenty-year veteran replacing a 14-year veteran. This is succession planning, not disruption. I've audited companies where a GC change actually mattered... usually because litigation exposure was shifting or governance structure was being rebuilt ahead of a transaction. Nothing in Choice's current posture suggests either. They walked away from the $8 billion Wyndham hostile bid in March 2024. The new GC inherits a cleaner strategic landscape than the outgoing one navigated.

The real number here is 89.49%. That's Choice's gross profit margin. Asset-light franchise models print margins like that because somebody else owns the building, funds the PIP, and absorbs the downside when RevPAR contracts. The dividend yield of 1.1% looks modest until you remember the franchisees are the ones holding real estate risk. Choice collects fees. The 14.5% payout ratio gives them room to grow the dividend for years without straining the model. The question is whether that growth attracts enough income-focused capital to offset the analysts who think the stock is overvalued. At $111.93 consensus target against a stock that recently dropped 5.37% through its 5-day moving average, the market's answer so far is: not yet.

Operator's Take

Here's what nobody's telling you... if you're a Choice franchisee, that $0.29 quarterly dividend is coming from YOUR fees. Every dollar they return to shareholders is a dollar that didn't go into loyalty program investment, distribution technology, or revenue delivery tools that actually put heads in your beds. Look at your loyalty contribution numbers for the last 12 months. If they're not beating 35%, you're funding someone else's dividend check. Ask the question at your next franchise advisory meeting. Make them answer it with actuals, not projections.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: Choice Hotels
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