Minor Hotels' North American Bet Implies a Cap Rate Thesis Most Buyers Won't Touch
A Thai hotel group with 80%+ owned assets wants to franchise its way into North America with 12 brands and a planned REIT launch. The math behind that pivot tells a more interesting story than the press release.
Minor Hotels reported THB 6.84 billion in core profit for 2025 (roughly $217M), up 32% year-over-year, on system-wide RevPAR growth of 4%. Those are solid numbers. But the real story is the capital structure shift underneath them: a company that currently owns north of 80% of its portfolio wants to reach 50-50 owned-versus-managed/franchised by 2027. That's not a growth strategy. That's a balance sheet restructuring disguised as one.
Let's decompose the North American play. Three luxury deals signed in 2025. A dedicated VP of Development hired in October. A planned hotel REIT launch mid-2026 to "recycle capital from mature assets." Translation: sell owned properties into a public vehicle, harvest the management and franchise fees, reduce real estate exposure. I've audited this exact structure at two different international groups expanding into the U.S. The playbook is familiar. The execution risk is where it gets interesting. Minor is entering a $120 billion market with 12 brands (four of which launched last year alone). Twelve brands for a company with roughly 560 properties globally. That's one brand for every 47 hotels. For context, Marriott runs about 31 brands across 9,000+ properties... one per 290 hotels. Minor's brand-to-property ratio suggests either extraordinary market segmentation or a portfolio that hasn't been stress-tested against actual demand.
The franchise pitch is "we're owners too, so we understand your pain." I've heard this from every international operator entering North America for the past decade. It's a compelling narrative. It's also irrelevant if the loyalty contribution doesn't materialize. Minor doesn't have a U.S. loyalty engine comparable to Bonvoy or Hilton Honors. That's the number that matters to any owner evaluating a flag. A 68% occupancy rate at 3% ADR growth globally doesn't tell you what a Minor-flagged luxury property in Miami will index against its comp set. Until there's actual U.S. performance data (not projections, not "anticipated contribution"), owners are buying a thesis, not a track record.
The REIT launch is the piece that deserves the most scrutiny. Mid-2026 timing means Minor needs to package owned assets at valuations that justify the IPO while simultaneously convincing new franchise partners that the brand drives enough demand to warrant fees. Those two objectives create tension. The REIT needs high asset valuations (which imply low cap rates and optimistic NOI assumptions). The franchise partners need evidence of revenue delivery (which requires years of operating data that doesn't exist yet in North America). An owner being pitched a Minor franchise today is essentially being asked to subsidize the brand's U.S. proof-of-concept while the parent company monetizes its owned assets through a public vehicle.
The 25 signings anticipated in Q1 2026 globally will make for a good press release. But signings aren't openings, letters of intent aren't contracts, and pipeline numbers in this industry have a well-documented attrition rate that nobody at the signing announcement ever mentions. For North America specifically, Minor is a new entrant with no domestic loyalty base, no established owner relationships at scale, and a brand architecture that's still being built. The 32% profit growth is real. The ambition is real. Whether the U.S. franchise economics pencil out for the owner... that's the number I'm still waiting to see.
Look... if a Minor Hotels development rep shows up with a franchise pitch, do two things before you take the second meeting. First, ask for actual U.S. loyalty contribution data from existing properties, not projections, not global averages. If they can't provide it, you're the test case, and test cases don't pay franchise fees... they should be getting a discount. Second, model your total brand cost at 18-20% of revenue and work backward to see if the rate premium over going independent justifies it. I've seen too many owners fall in love with a beautiful brand deck from an international operator and end up funding someone else's North American expansion with their own capital. Your money, your risk... make sure the math works for YOU, not just for Bangkok.