New York, Feb 26, 2026, 06:07 EST — Premarket
- Clear Secure slid 1.1% ahead of the bell, cooling off after jumping 39% on Wednesday.
- The company raised its regular dividend, announced a special payout, and increased its share repurchase authorization.
- 2026 cash-flow targets and momentum in the firm’s enterprise identity segment are under investor scrutiny.
Clear Secure slipped 1.1% to $46.00 before the bell Thursday, cooling off after a sharp rally. The identity-verification firm had soared almost 39% to $46.51 the previous session, powered by strong trading volume.
Stockanalysis
This is a key moment for Clear, which is pitching investors on its ability to generate cash even as it pushes further beyond airport fast lanes and into the wider digital identity market. Alongside quarterly numbers, the company rolled out a larger capital-return plan—a combination that tends to attract quick-turn traders but also puts pressure on Clear to deliver results.
Investors are chasing more reliable earnings, with the market showing little patience for “growth later” plays. Clear’s update delivered: higher bookings, margin gains, and a shareholder payout timeline that’s easy to track.
Clear reported Wednesday that fourth-quarter revenue jumped 16.7% to $240.8 million, while total bookings—sales under contract but not yet fully counted as revenue—were up 25.4% at $287.1 million.
Clearme
The company logged net income of $46.5 million for the quarter, with adjusted EBITDA coming in at $79.9 million—this measure excludes interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and what management calls non-recurring items. Free cash flow landed at $187.4 million, reflecting the amount remaining after capex, according to the release.
Clearme
Clear’s board bumped up its quarterly dividend to $0.15 a share from $0.125, and signed off on a special payout of $0.20 per share. Both will go out March 24 to shareholders recorded as of March 10. Directors also signed off on adding $125 million to the buyback program, bringing the total remaining authorization to roughly $250.3 million.
Clearme
Clear is projecting first-quarter 2026 revenue in the $242 million to $245 million range, and expects bookings between $248 million and $253 million. The company set a minimum free cash flow goal of $440 million for the year.
Clearme
Clear reported its total membership climbed to 38.0 million, with 7.6 million active CLEAR+ members on the books. The company noted it “recast” earlier active CLEAR+ figures, stripping out certain lapsed accounts found during a recent overhaul of its billing system—a revision likely to catch some investor attention once the 10-K drops.
Clearme
Goldman Sachs bumped up its price target on Clear to $61 from $41 and reiterated its “buy” call, citing the latest earnings and the renewed partnership with American Express. “The renewal of the American Express partnership addresses investor concerns about member and revenue retention,” analyst Ben Miller said, according to Investing.com.
Investing
Clear has pushed to prove it has potential beyond airports. On Tuesday, Mount Sinai announced plans to roll out CLEAR1, Clear’s identity system, throughout its network, touting itself as the first in New York City to adopt the platform.
Mountsinai
Still, the setup isn’t all upside. Shares that jump on dividends and buybacks can just as easily shed those gains if bookings falter, enterprise deals turn patchy, or travel numbers slip; plus, Clear remains exposed to ongoing biometric and privacy-policy risks that could upend the narrative in a hurry.
Next up: traders are watching to see if the post-results rally keeps its legs heading into the cash-return dates — with March 10 the record date, followed by payment on March 24. They’ll also be scanning the annual report for more specifics on member metrics and just how much capital return is in play.