Booking Holdings stock slides 6% after earnings beat and 25-for-1 split plan; April 2 looms

Booking Holdings stock slides 6% after earnings beat and 25-for-1 split plan; April 2 looms

February 20, 2026

New York, Feb 19, 2026, 17:45 (EST) — After-hours

  • Shares of Booking Holdings slid roughly 6% Thursday, hitting a low of $3,874.89.
  • Fourth-quarter numbers landed a day ago, with the online travel company also laying out its goals for 2026.
  • U.S. pricing signals, talk swirling around AI risks, and the effects of an upcoming stock split are all under the microscope for investors right now.

Shares of Booking Holdings Inc (BKNG.O) dropped 6.2% on Thursday, landing at $4,007.45 after hours. The stock spent the session fluctuating between $3,874.89 and $4,291.00.

Shares fell just a day after the online travel company topped Wall Street’s profit forecasts and revealed a 25-to-1 authorized share split. Company execs also pointed to a touch of weakness in U.S. pricing and noted guests are booking shorter stays—signals some investors interpret as hints about consumer discretionary trends.

Why now: Booking sits at the expensive end of travel shares, with plenty of heft in the index. Markets have been on edge over signs of resilience or weakness as consumers show signs of getting choosier again.

Booking reported a 9% jump in fourth-quarter room nights compared with a year ago. Gross bookings hit $43.0 billion, up 16%, and revenue also rose 16% to $6.3 billion. Chief executive Glenn Fogel emphasized the company’s push into Generative AI, highlighting cost savings from its transformation program and ongoing reinvestment efforts.

Booking is projecting gross bookings to climb 14% to 16% in the first quarter, with room nights expected to rise 5% to 7%. The company bumped its quarterly cash dividend up to $10.50 per share from $9.60, and it bought back $2.1 billion of its own shares during the quarter; $21.8 billion remains under its current authorization.

ADR—that’s average daily rate in industry jargon—measures how much revenue a hotel pulls in per occupied room each day. When ADR dips and stays get shorter, it’s a signal: travelers might be choosing cheaper options, cutting their trips, or perhaps a bit of both.

It hasn’t helped that the broader U.S. stock market slipped on Thursday. Investors are rattled by the pace of AI breakthroughs, anxious about which sectors might get upended. “The market is trying to grapple with what business lines are under threat … from AI,” said Keith Buchanan, senior portfolio manager at GLOBALT Investments. As for Booking, shares dropped as some investors grew uneasy that AI-driven alternatives might change how people search for and book travel. Reuters

Expedia Group slipped roughly 2%. Airbnb and TripAdvisor saw small gains.

CEO Glenn Fogel sold shares on Feb. 17 using a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan, according to two Form 4 filings disclosed in a separate SEC document.

Risks aren’t one-sided. Should U.S. pricing pressure move up from budget and mid-scale travel to premium trips, Booking’s growth assumptions could unravel quickly. There’s also competition, and with traffic patterns shifting—especially as AI alters search—the outlook gets even murkier.

April 2 is marked—on that date, Booking’s 25-to-1 authorized share split kicks in, according to the company.

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