Venetian Las Vegas, IHG to End Hotel Alliance in January

IHG and the Venetian and the Palazzo are ending a 15-year-old hotel licensing agreement. That pact will be terminated on Jan. 1, 2025.

Venetian remodel
Venetian Las Vegas. That property and Palazzo are ending a hotel agreement with IHG. (Image: Vegas Means Business)

Since October 2010, the Las Vegas Strip integrated resort complex has been part of IHG’s booking system, with the hotels affiliated as members of the InterContinental Hotels & Resorts global portfolio. IHG, which is one of the largest hoteliers in the world as measured by number of rooms, didn’t give a reason as to why the partnership is being dissolved, but noted it will have little impact on the number of rooms available on its booking platform and that financial effects will be minimal.

Although the end of this agreement will remove 7,092 rooms or approximately 0.7% from IHG’s overall system size in 2025, the unique nature of the fee structure under this particular licensing agreement means it contributed less than $1 million or 0.1% of IHG’s revenue from fee business in 2023 and a net nil contribution to operating profit from reportable segments,” according to a statement issued by the hotel giant.

The news arrived a day after MGM Resorts International said the Delano at the Mandalay Bay campus will be rebranded to a W hotel later this year, extending that operator’s relationship with Marriott International.

Examining Why Venetian, IHG Deal is No More

As noted above, IHG didn’t get into specifics as to why the Venetian and Palazzo are exiting the InterContinental Hotels booking system, but a change in ownership could be one of the reasons.

IHG struck the original deal with Las Vegas Sands, but that casino operator sold Venetian, Palazzo, and a formerly eponymous convention center in 2021 for $6.25 billion. Private equity firm Apollo Global Management runs the venues while VICI Properties owns the real estate.

In terms of which party decided to end the IHG/Venetian relationship, it was either the hotel operator or Apollo. Five years ago, IHG and Sands reached an agreement that was slated to run through 2027 for three of the gaming company’s Macau casino hotels, but those properties don’t currently appear in searches on the IHG website.

Interestingly, those two companies have history together. In 2014, Apollo paid $459.52 million (in today’s dollars) to acquire 18 European hotels from Ivanhoe Cambridge. At that time, all of those properties sported various InterContinental brands.

Las Vegas Hotel Partnerships are Often Fluid

Broadly speaking, the hotels on the Las Vegas Strip are controlled by gaming companies and traditional hoteliers often don’t put their names on gaming venues. However, the two sides often work together strategically, including leveraging their respective loyalty programs and booking systems.

However, as proven by IHG and the Venetian, and others before that, casino operator/hotelier partnerships are often fluid and usually have expiration dates.

As of this writing, Apollo hasn’t announced plans for a replacement of IHG at the Venetian and Palazzo.

Todd Shriber
Todd Shriber Financial Reporter

Todd Shriber is a senior news reporter covering gaming financials, casino business, stocks, and mergers and acquisitions for Casino.org.

Todd got his start in financial markets as a reporter with Bloomberg News. Later, he became a trader at a Southern California-based long/short hedge fund, where he specialized in the trading sector and international ETFs leading up to and during the financial crisis. He joined Casino.org in 2019.

Currently, Todd analyzes, researches, and writes on ETFs for various web-based publications and financial services firms. Shriber has been featured and quoted in Barron's, CNBC.com, and The Wall Street Journal. His work can also be found on Benzinga, ETF Daily News, ETF Trends, MarketWatch, Fox Business, and Nasdaq.com.

He currently resides in Las Vegas, where he enjoys golf and taking his black lab to the dog park. He's also an avid sports fan and likes to wager on college football and the NBA. You can also find him at the three-card poker and roulette table, even though he knows better.

Contact Todd at todd.shriber@casino.org.

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