New York, March 1, 2026, 11:48 AM EST — The market has wrapped up trading.
Booking Holdings Inc’s shares (BKNG) slipped 0.26% to close at $4,239.35 on Friday. U.S. markets will be closed Sunday. Investors now scan the horizon for fresh catalysts in a travel sector that’s been lurching between gains and losses. FinanceCharts
Why now? Online travel agencies (OTAs) are under pressure as investors worry about AI speeding up changes in how people search and book trips. Morgan Stanley’s Brian Nowak argues Booking can still “own the customer,” leveraging traveler data to steer users toward more profitable direct bookings—even with “agentic” AI assistants getting better at planning and purchasing. The bank lowered its price target to $5,500 from $6,150. Investing.com
Tuesday brings another shot for investors to dig into that narrative. Booking’s CFO, Ewout Steenbergen, is set for a fireside chat at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference in San Francisco, scheduled for March 3 at 4:05 p.m. PT (7:05 p.m. ET). The conversation will stream live on the company’s investor relations site. PR Newswire
Shareholders have a packed schedule ahead. According to a filing, Booking’s 25-for-1 forward stock split sets March 6 as the record date—the deadline for determining which investors will get additional shares. The new shares are scheduled to be distributed after markets close on April 2, and the stock is set to begin trading on a split-adjusted basis starting April 6. SEC
Booking is pairing its split with a cash return. The board approved a $10.50 per-share dividend for shareholders on the books as of March 6, to be paid March 31, according to the company’s fourth-quarter filing. CEO Glenn Fogel pointed to the platform’s “strength” as Booking moves further into generative AI. SEC
Next week arrives after travel stocks tracked the market’s moves. Expedia gave up 1.03% Friday; Tripadvisor lost 1.65%, and MakeMyTrip slid 2.60%. The S&P 500 also finished the day down 0.43%. MarketWatch
Booking’s roster hasn’t let up on product or marketing efforts as they hold their ground. KAYAK, which sits under the Booking umbrella, introduced the “Got That Right” brand platform on Feb. 27. Carolina Montenegro, KAYAK’s marketing chief, put it this way: travelers aren’t after more info—they want reassurance. PR Newswire
Still, there’s a clear risk lurking: the next big headline might not be about a conference remark or some corporate move — it could be about demand itself. Following last month’s results, Booking execs flagged a dip in average daily rates, or ADRs (average revenue per occupied hotel room per day), along with guests cutting trip lengths as some consumers remained hesitant on discretionary spending. Reuters
Macro forces can jolt this group fast. Global PMI numbers and the U.S. payrolls data—due Friday—stand out as important releases this week, with the potential to shift rate bets and stir sentiment across discretionary stocks like travel. SP Global
BKNG traders have their eyes on three key points: reopening on Monday, Steenbergen’s March 3 appearance, and March 6—which marks the record date for the stock split and dividend. Early April brings the split distribution and the start of split-adjusted trading.