4Hoteliers
SEARCH
ITB 2025 Special Reporting
SHARE THIS PAGE
NEWSLETTERS
CONTACT US
SUBMIT CONTENT
ADVERTISING
Four Seasons is Becoming the New Ritz-Carlton.
By Thomas Brown
Thursday, 2nd October 2025
 

And in case you forgot, Ritz-Carlton is just Marriott with lipstick; Every luxury brand follows the same cycle.

At the beginning, it’s uncompromising, rare, and obsessive about detail and then institutional money arrives and growth becomes the strategy.

Standards bend, design flattens, and identity thins. What was once truly rare becomes merely aspirational luxury.

Ritz-Carlton proves the point. It was once the crown jewel of American hospitality. After Marriott took control, it became a carcass with branding—luxury theater for people who don’t know the difference. The same slide is underway at Four Seasons. Aman, for all its allure, will face the same pressures.

For allocators, this critical insight: you don’t want to invest in the next Ritz-Carlton. Neither do you want the next Four Seasons. You can’t underwrite scarcity when the business model depends on scale.

The very attribute that makes legacy brands attractive to growth capital—the ability to plant new flags in every market—is the attribute that destroys their long-term positioning. Every new opening dilutes the mystique. Every new tower blurs the edge. Once identity is eroded, no amount of marketing spend or capex can buy it back.

That’s why serious capital is flowing toward independents and micro-collections. The most valuable assets aren’t 300-key resorts with marble bathrooms. They’re sub-100-key properties that can’t be replicated: the thirty-six-key estate in Umbria that feels like a private world, the forty-two-key inn on the California coast that sets architectural benchmarks, or the lodge in Africa that books a year out because it embodies identity rather than volume.

When brands trade exclusivity for growth, they forfeit the crown. And the crown passes to the independents.

Allocators who understand this cycle know what to do. Forget the “next Four Seasons.” Instead, own the hotels that make Four Seasons irrelevant. That’s the future of luxury. They’re assets that resist scale, preserve integrity, and keep scarcity as their moat.

A forty-key hotel with uncompromised DNA will deliver better long-term returns than a four-hundred-key aspirational resort. It might not produce more EBITDA, but it will attract higher multpiles, a deeper buyer pool, and a stronger exit. That’s how long-term value is created in this market.

Legacy brands will keep generating cash flow serving aspirational luxury. There’s nothing wrong with that model. But the apex—the independents that remain rare and identity-driven—will command the highest premiums when they change hands.

Investors have a choice. They can chase yield in brands sliding downmarket, or they can invest in the independents that still make people stop and gasp when they enter the lobby.

For more on where true luxury value lives, follow Unspoken Hospitality. adaltius.com/unspoken-hospitality

Thomas Brown - Follow
CEO at Ad Altius Advisors

Brand Awareness - Online Marketing at 4Hoteliers.com ...[Click for More]
 Latest News  (Click title to read article)




 Latest Articles  (Click title to read)




 Most Read Articles  (Click title to read)




~ Important Notice ~
Articles appearing on 4Hoteliers contain copyright material. They are meant for your personal use and may not be reproduced or redistributed. While 4Hoteliers makes every effort to ensure accuracy, we can not be held responsible for the content nor the views expressed, which may not necessarily be those of either the original author or 4Hoteliers or its agents.
© Copyright 4Hoteliers 2001-2025 ~ unless stated otherwise, all rights reserved.
You can read more about 4Hoteliers and our company here
Use of this web site is subject to our
terms & conditions of service and privacy policy