What SoHo House Going Public Says About the Future of Luxury Travel


Skift Take

Even if luxury travel bounces back quickly, there may be a ceiling on how well an exclusive, members-only club like SoHo House will do during the pandemic recovery relative to traditional, luxury hotel competitors.

The notoriously exclusive SoHo House, a global chain of members-only clubs known for favoring the creative class over financiers, is finally courting Wall Street in a second attempt to go public. SoHo House is working with Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan on a potential New York stock market listing that would value the company at as much as $3 billion, the British newspaper the Times reported late last week. The London-based members club ended plans to go public in 2018, when the company was then valued at $2 billion. It may not seem like the best time for a company like SoHo House to go public, given the world is nearly a year into a global pandemic that has temporarily suspended operations at many of the company’s 27 clubs and left 1,000 of its 8,000 employees without a job.

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But travel analysts see plenty of upside to the