New York, May 7, 2026, 13:04 EDT
StubHub Holdings is staring down its next earnings report with options traders bracing for a 13% swing—another gauge of sentiment for the ticket marketplace, which only went public less than a year ago. That projected move, pulled from Bloomberg’s options data, is tied to StubHub’s quarterly results set for May 13.
Timing is key here. StubHub has scheduled its first-quarter 2026 earnings release for after the bell on Wednesday, May 13. Management plans to follow up with a 5:00 p.m. ET conference call.
Shares hovered around $7.72 on Thursday, posting a modest gain for the day. With a 13% swing equating to about $1 per share in either direction, volatility remains in focus. Earlier this week, a Yahoo Finance valuation piece cast the stock’s recent bounce as fueling a broader argument over whether STUB’s slump has been overdone.
Wall Street’s taken a careful approach here. Morgan Stanley started coverage on StubHub with an Equalweight rating—essentially keeping it at a hold—and put the price target at $8.25, per an MT Newswires note relayed by MarketScreener.
StubHub’s March update gave investors fresh numbers to work with: $9.2 billion in 2025 gross merchandise sales—essentially what buyers spent on tickets and fulfillment before exclusions—and $1.7 billion in revenue. For 2026, the company expects gross merchandise sales between $9.9 billion and $10.1 billion. Adjusted EBITDA is projected to fall in the $400 million to $420 million range that year, stripping out things like interest, taxes, depreciation, and select one-time charges.
StubHub founder and CEO Eric Baker pointed to “delivering strong marketplace growth” and said the company was putting money into both its main resale platform and fresh market bets. He added that StubHub aims to “create transparency in the ticket marketplace,” a phrase now back in focus following recent regulatory moves. StubHub
No minor detail, that regulatory angle. Back in April, the Federal Trade Commission ordered StubHub to hand over $10 million to resolve allegations tied to how it disclosed ticket pricing. “Price transparency is essential,” said Christopher Mufarrige, who heads up the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. Federal Trade Commission
The sector isn’t exactly quiet right now. This week, Live Nation—parent of Ticketmaster and a major player in the business—posted first-quarter revenue gains, but also logged a $450 million legal charge after a federal jury found it liable for monopoly practices. Ticketing remains in the spotlight.
StubHub is up against Ticketmaster, SeatGeek, and Vivid Seats, competitors putting the heat on all sides. Its latest annual report flags risks: increased ticketing competition may weigh on transaction volume, fees, and margins. Investors are eyeing the May 13 update for clues on customer-acquisition spending, inventory depth, and any strides in primary ticketing.
The options market doesn’t always get it right. After StubHub’s March 4 earnings, the stock actually stayed within the range implied by options, according to Investing.com. But in November 2025, shares pushed past those expectations. This next earnings release? It could hinge on just a few details: marketing efficiency, fresh margin guidance, regulatory expenses, or how ticket demand holds up.
For STUB investors, it’s not simply about the company’s growth prospects anymore. The question now: can StubHub deliver growth and at the same time cut down on what it spends to attract buyers and sellers? Pressure is coming from all sides—regulators, competitors, and option traders—just ahead of the numbers.