- My Account
- Logout
- Register
- Login
Hotel giant goes for Olympic gold as profits wow the City
Related Articles
14 February 2012
Intercontinental Hotels, the world's biggest hotel operator, beat City forecasts for its 2011 profits and accompanied that with a bumper dividend hike.
"You can really call this a great British success story," said chief executive Richard Solomons. "We are the largest hotel group in the world based in Britain but the UK accounts for just 5% of our revenues."
He is excited about the Olympics and Queen's Jubilee effect on his British hotels this year, with two new Holiday Inn and Staybridge hotels opending at Stratford and IHG offering more than 50 London hotels.
He said: "We are now 80% booked for the Games. It's not just London hotels and there has been a good knock-on effect to further out-of-town hotels. We are also managing the main athlete and official accommodation units in the Olympic Village, drafting in more than 100 of our best general managers from around the globe."
London's InterContinental Park Lane remained one of the star performers last year, with revenues per available room up by 7.3% in 2011 against growth across the entire group of 6.2%. But China and the US remain the drivers with revenues per available room growing by 10.7% and 7.5% respectively.
IHG plans to launch two new brands of hotel this year, one for each of those regions. Solomons is playing it close to his chest which position in the market these will take, although its seems likely the US brand will be mass market and the Chinese upmarket.
He hopes they can reproduce the growth of Hotel Indigo, the group's boutique hotels label, which has gone from zero to 100 planned hotels in seven years.
The only major weak points during 2011 were Egypt and Bahrain which were hit by uprisings, and Japan, where the economy was still recovering from the tsunami.
Pre-tax profits rose by 34% to $532 million (£337.6 million) on revenues up by 9% to $1.8 billion for the full year. The dividend has been increased by 15% to 55 cents a share.
In January, revenues per available room rose by 6% while room rates are 3.5% ahead of a year ago. That is better than the group saw in the final quarter of 2011.
Solomons said: "In spite of the considerable uncertainty in the eurozone, IHG is well positioned to globally benefit from positive, long-term industry trends, and, in particular, growing demand in emerging markets."
Comments
Top stories in Business
Top stories in Business
-
No end to Tube nightmare as commuters warned of MORE chaos tonight
-
Double dip recession is worse than feared as UK faces ‘hurricane’
-
They attacked "like a pack" raining fists on a defenceless legal secretary. Yesterday they walked free from court. No wonder their victim says she has been denied justice.
-
Mayor demands report from Transport for London into Jubilee Line nightmare that left hundreds of commuters trapped for hours underground
-
Author Will Self flees with his children after roof of £1million Georgian Stockwell townhouse collapses
The O2
Check out the cool stuff happening under our tent such as the hottest gigs, comedy, sport, films, clubs, bars, restaurants and much more.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Win a Silverstone track day with Zantac 75
Feel the burn of a different kind - 20 Silverstone motoring experiences to be won
Reader Offers email A fantastic selection of
offers, giveaways and
promotions.
Cannes Film Festival - in pictures
Biggest ever image of the Queen, and she also appears made out of stamps, cheese and BEER
Man v Woman v Food: the big burger challenge
New kids from the Bloc: new wave of Russians settling in London
London drug dealer pictured himself with bags of cannabis and wearing crown of £20 notes
BarChick: Janet's Bar