IWG plc, the Jersey-incorporated, Switzerland-domiciled owner of Regus, Spaces, HQ and Signature, enters mid-2026 in an unusual position: delivering its strongest-ever operating results just as it ends the nearly four-decade era of founder Mark Dixon as chief executive.
Financial Performance: Record Numbers, Persistent Debt Concerns
IWG’s preliminary results for the year ended December 31, 2025, published on March 3, 2026, showed system-wide revenue of $4.5 billion and adjusted EBITDA of $531 million, its strongest operational year to date. Growth was modest at the group level — system-wide revenue rose 4% year-over-year, while adjusted EBITDA increased 6% from 2024 — but the composition of that growth is the real story. Adjusted gross profit increased 9% to over $1 billion, and the Company-owned segment margin rose to 26% from 25%.
The standout was the Managed & Franchised division, IWG’s capital-light growth engine. System-wide revenue in that division increased 28%, with recurring management fees surging 140% to $45 million from $19 million in 2024. Recurring management fees are expected to reach $80 million in 2026 and $125 million in 2027, and the company has repeatedly compared its trajectory to established hotel franchisors such as Marriott and Hilton, noting it is still well below their typical proportion of fee-based revenue.
Network expansion also hit records: 1,132 centers were signed (up 26%) and 782 centers opened (up 25%), giving IWG over 1 million rooms across 4,609 centers in more than 120 countries, with an additional 230,000 rooms in the pipeline.
On the balance sheet, IWG continued a multi-year deleveraging effort. Net debt declined to $715 million from $729 million in 2024, improving the leverage ratio to 1.35x EBITDA from 1.45x. This came despite returning $144 million to shareholders through $130 million in buybacks and $14 million in dividends.
Guidance for 2026 points to further progress, with adjusted EBITDA guidance set at $585 million to $625 million and a new $100 million buyback program announced for 2026, though the company has flagged that net debt is expected to rise slightly in 2026 even as capital returns continue.
Despite the record headline figures, the market reaction was muted to negative: IWG’s stock declined 8.4% to £2.13 on the day of the results presentation. Analysts have pointed to structural concerns rather than execution — one summary noted the stock’s score is primarily constrained by high balance-sheet leverage, including negative equity, and a sharp 2025 deterioration in revenue, margins and cash flow versus 2024 on certain measures, even as the underlying franchise transition progresses.
There is also a broader sector overhang: reports note the share price was negatively impacted by market concerns over AI, which affected perceptions of the commercial property sector, given fears that AI-driven productivity gains could eventually reduce corporate demand for physical office space — an irony given IWG’s own flexible-space model is often pitched as a hedge against exactly that uncertainty.
The Leadership Transition
On June 16, 2026, IWG announced a significant reshaping of its top leadership. Christian Schmitz was appointed Chief Executive Officer, with founder Mark Dixon transitioning to Executive Chair and Douglas Sutherland becoming Deputy Chair, moving up from his prior role as Non-Executive Chair.
Dixon’s departure from the CEO role is historically significant. The transition sees Dixon hand over the reins to insider Christian Schmitz after nearly 40 years in the role, having founded IWG in 1989 and built a network spanning more than 120 countries through brands such as Regus, Spaces, HQ and Signature. In the company’s own words, Dixon reflected that it had been a privilege to lead the company as it grew to 6,000 locations open and in the pipeline worldwide since founding it with a single Brussels center.
Schmitz is very much an internal appointment rather than an outside hire, which the company has framed as ensuring continuity. He joined IWG last year as chief transformation officer before being promoted to Global Head of Regions, and brings a background as a partner at McKinsey, a director at KKR Capstone, and previously CEO of Selecta for six years. Dixon has publicly endorsed the choice, saying Schmitz has made a significant impact, bringing deep insight into our business and a clear focus on execution, and is well placed to lead the company’s next growth phase.
Dixon’s new role is not a clean exit. As Executive Chair, he will continue to provide strategic guidance to the Board and act as an adviser to the CEO — a structure IWG has explicitly linked to preserving his industry knowledge through what it calls an orderly CEO transition process, reflecting the desire of the board and shareholders to retain Dixon’s unrivalled industry knowledge, experience and long-term strategic perspective.
It is also notable that Dixon remains IWG’s largest shareholder by a wide margin, and reporting around the FY2025 results indicated his personal stake had increased because he did not participate in the 2025 buyback program — a detail investors may read as a signal of continued confidence even as he steps back operationally.
Reuters framed the reshuffle in blunter commercial terms, reporting the changes come as the company seeks to cut debt and costs amid geopolitical and AI-driven pressures, and that IWG has been tackling rising debt and costs, pressured by the fallout of the Middle East conflict and AI-driven shifts in workplace strategy. That framing sits somewhat in tension with the company’s own “record results” narrative, and underscores that the succession, while presented as proactive and orderly, is also occurring against a backdrop of real financial and macro pressure.
Reading the Two Threads Together
Taken together, the results and the succession tell a coherent story about an inflection point rather than a crisis. IWG’s underlying operating metrics — network growth, fee income, EBITDA, deleveraging — are moving in the right direction, and the shift toward a franchise-heavy, capital-light model mirrors a well-trodden playbook from the hotel industry.
At the same time, elevated leverage, a still-large net debt position, and investor anxiety about AI’s long-term effect on office demand mean the market has not fully rewarded that operational progress.
Handing day-to-day execution to an internal transformation specialist, while keeping the founder engaged as an adviser and the company’s largest shareholder, is a low-disruption way to test whether professional management can accelerate the deleveraging and franchise-fee growth story without losing strategic continuity.
Whether investors come to see this as effective succession planning or as evidence of deeper pressure on the business will likely depend on how quickly Schmitz can translate record operating metrics into a re-rating of the stock, and on whether net debt reduction resumes in 2026 despite the guided uptick.















