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Hotel group Accor narrowly beats profit expectations in 2025

By Thomson Reuters Feb 19, 2026 | 12:34 AM

By Dimitri Rhodes and Jerome Terroy

Feb 19 (Reuters) – French hotel group Accor reported an annual core profit just above market expectations on Thursday, supported by the diversification of its hotel ​portfolio and the expansion of its loyalty programme.

Europe’s biggest ‌hotel operator said its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) were 1.20 billion euros ($1.41 billion) last year, compared with 1.12 billion euros in 2024 and a company-compiled analyst consensus of 1.19 billion euros.

“In 2026, we will focus ‌on … ​the growth of our network and strengthening ⁠partnerships within our (loyalty programme), adapting ⁠our business model with more franchise agreements in mature markets, and finalising the sale of our stake in Essendi,” finance chief Martine Gerow said during a press call.

Accor said in December ​it would divest its 30.6% stake in Essendi, formerly AccorInvest. It plans to use the proceeds to fund a previously ⁠announced 450-million-euro share buyback programme in 2026, ⁠meaning the repurchases will only take place once ​the deal has been closed.

Accor shares slid 1.2% in early trading in ​Paris, with AlphaValue analyst Yi Zhong saying a smaller ‌contribution from Essendi weighed on the earnings.

“The postponement of share buyback would be another reason for a reservation sentiment, especially since we expect discussions over the Essendi stake sale to take some time,” ⁠the analyst added.

The operator of brands including Ibis and Novotel said its revenue per available room (RevPAR), one of the industry’s main performance indicators, rose ⁠4.2% to 76 ‌euros in 2025.

“The rapid integration of artificial intelligence ⁠into our digital roadmap and the robustness of ​our ‌pipeline allow us to accelerate our development and ​be even more ⁠efficient,” Accor CEO Sébastien Bazin said in a statement.

The company launched in February an AI-powered, ChatGPT‑based direct booking tool, pitched as a way to reduce the group’s dependence on online travel agencies and cut distribution costs.

(Reporting by Dimitri Rhodes and Jerome Terroy in Gdansk, editing ​by Milla Nissi-Prussak)