Six Continents Explained

Six Continents Hotels plc
Foundation: in London, England, United Kingdom
Location:London, England, United Kingdom
Products:Hotel services
Public Houses
Key People:David Bland (Managing Director)
Website:sixcontinentshotels.com

Six Continents was a large British-based hotel and hospitality business which was listed on the London Stock Exchange and was once a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

History

The company was formed in June 2000 when the brewing business of Bass plc was sold to the Belgian brewer Interbrew (now AB InBev) and the remaining hotel and pub holdings were renamed Six Continents plc.[1]

In April 2001, Six Continents bought the UK-based Posthouse Hotels business from Compass Group for £810 million, and during the following year re-branded the 79 hotels to Holiday Inn.[2]

In 2003 it de-merged into a pubs business, Mitchells & Butlers, and the remaining hotels and soft drinks business of Britvic, were renamed as InterContinental Hotels Group.[3]

Brands and companies

Six Continents owned, managed or franchised the hotel brands InterContinental, Crowne Plaza, Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, and Staybridge Suites. Its pubs and restaurants included All Bar One, Browns, Edward's, Ember Inns, Harvester, Hollywood Bowl, It's A Scream, O'Neill's, Toby Carvery and Vintage Inns.

Notes and References

  1. News: Day . Julia . Bass to become Six Continents . . 27 June 2001 . 20 December 2018.
  2. Web site: Posthouse Deal Wins Six Continents Top Industry Award . Hotel News Resource . 9 December 2012 . 22 March 2002.
  3. Platt . Gordon . Six Continents' Split-up Creates Two New ADRs . . 1 June 2003 . 20 December 2018.