New York, Feb 9, 2026, 17:53 (ET) — Trading after the bell
- BKNG dropped roughly 5% on Monday, trailing gains in the broader market.
- Trading volume surged, topping recent averages by a wide margin.
- Eyes now turn to Booking as it prepares to report results and guidance on Feb. 18.
Shares of Booking Holdings Inc. (BKNG) dropped roughly 5% on Monday, with after-hours trades hovering close to $4,237. The stock’s intraday range stretched from $4,219 up to $4,457.
Even with major U.S. indexes in the green, Booking lagged behind rivals Expedia and Trip.com, according to MarketWatch data. Shares now sit roughly 27% off the July 2025 peak. Volume spiked, too, with 672,079 shares changing hands—far above the 50-day average of 250,322. 1
Timing is key here. Booking plans to report its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 numbers after the bell on Feb. 18, with a conference call set for 4:30 p.m. ET. That setup often fuels shifting bets and bumps up volatility ahead of the event. 2
Away from travel, things on the macro front remained quiet. Treasury yields barely budged, with traders waiting for U.S. jobs and inflation data coming up later this week, according to the Associated Press. 3
Booking runs as an OTA—that’s an online travel agency handling hotel rooms, flights, and a range of travel services via the web. Investors keep a close eye on gross bookings, the sum total of travel arranged through Booking’s platform. Room nights and take rates are also in focus; those metrics reveal how many stays are being booked and what slice of each booking becomes actual revenue.
Booking runs a roster of brands—Booking.com, Priceline, Agoda, KAYAK, OpenTable—delivering travel services across over 220 countries and territories, according to the company. 4
Investors were clearly in the mix Monday, judging by the surge in volume. That high share price? It tends to exaggerate swings, especially when major holders tweak positions or stop-losses get triggered.
The company finds itself alongside Expedia, Airbnb, and some regional outfits. If travelers start opting for cheaper trips, or if paid search expenses tick up again, that would weigh on the sector.
But there’s a risk here. Should management strike a cautious tone about early 2026, investors might see the latest slide as more than a blip—possibly the opening move in a broader reset, not just a rough day.
Flip side, if the numbers come in clean and the outlook holds steady, buyers might jump back in fast—assuming broader risk appetite doesn’t falter.
Investors won’t have to wait long for the next update: Booking will release its results on Feb. 18 and field questions about what’s ahead for travel demand and spending through 2026.