London, June 16, 2026, 14:55 BST
- IHG shares traded at about $168.95 in London, up 0.63%, following another share buyback notice.
- The company picked up 20,000 shares on June 15, paying an average $168.3849 each, and plans to cancel the shares.
- Investors are focused on whether RevPAR growth will hold up going into the August 11 half-year results.
InterContinental Hotels Group PLC shares traded a touch higher in London Tuesday, staying near recent highs. Investors sized up another share buyback notice, but the stock’s valuation already reflects plenty of optimism. IHG’s investor page showed shares quoted at $168.95 at 14:47 on June 16, up 0.63% from the prior close. The company now lists its shares in dollars on the London Stock Exchange after switching from pounds to U.S. dollars for ordinary-share trading on January 2, 2026. InterContinental Hotels Group PLC
IHG’s latest filing put the stock back on traders’ radar. The company said it bought 20,000 ordinary shares on June 15, working through Goldman Sachs International. Price came in between $167.05 and $169.80, with an average of $168.3849. The shares will be cancelled. Companies often do buybacks to help boost EPS, since the profits are split among fewer shares. IHG reported 149,323,876 ordinary shares outstanding after the purchase, not counting treasury shares. MarketScreener
IHG’s stock strength is not all from the buyback. The support still comes mainly from the group’s May trading update. Holiday Inn and InterContinental owner IHG reported a 4.4% rise in global RevPAR for the first quarter. RevPAR (revenue per available room) mixes room rates and occupancy. All regions showed growth: RevPAR in the Americas up 3.6%, EMEAA up 5.6%, Greater China up 5.7%. CEO Elie Maalouf called out “better than expected demand in most regions around the world,” and pointed to more booked revenue growth in Q2. InterContinental Hotels Group PLC
That matters for the stock because IHG runs an asset-light model—small moves in room demand, fees, or new rooms can hit profit quickly. The bull story is simple. IHG now has more than 7,000 hotels, booked 5.0% net system growth year on year in Q1, and told investors it should hit consensus for growth and profit. Its own consensus page, refreshed May 18 from 14 analysts, put FY26 at 2.7% RevPAR growth, $1.392 billion in operating profit from reportable segments, and adjusted EPS at 570 cents. InterContinental Hotels Group PLC
Valuation and travel-cycle risk are the main worries. At about $169, IHG is trading at nearly 30 times FY26 adjusted EPS consensus. That P/E puts it well above cheap levels. Even with global reach and steady capital returns, the price is high. There’s not much cushion if U.S. travel slows, if Chinese demand falters, if the Middle East gets hit, or if business bookings weaken. Shares have run up. The next event is half-year results on August 11—investors want to see if Q1 RevPAR strength and buyback-fueled EPS growth are holding up. InterContinental Hotels Group PLC
IHG doesn’t jump out as cheap here. The company’s momentum is real, the buyback helps, and the pipeline is still a positive for the long run. But with the stock price already pricing in these strengths, IHG may need solid half-year results to push higher from current levels.