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NASDAQ:GRAB 16 January 2026 - 26 March 2026

Grab Stock Climbs 4% After $400 Million Buyback, Foodpanda Taiwan Deal Draws Analyst Support

Grab Stock Climbs 4% After $400 Million Buyback, Foodpanda Taiwan Deal Draws Analyst Support

Shares of Grab Holdings jumped 4.1% to finish at $3.79 on Tuesday, after the Singapore-based ride-hailing and delivery firm announced plans to repurchase up to $400 million of its stock over the next four months. The buyback includes a $250 million accelerated share repurchase — a method that quickly reduces the outstanding float — and a separate agreement with Morgan Stanley to buy back up to another $150 million. This matters for Grab right now, as the company works to shore up sentiment after its February 2026 guidance on revenue and adjusted EBITDA fell short of Wall Street’s mark and sent shares sliding—even though it notched its first full-year net profit. Management later told Reuters they’re sticking to targets: annual revenue growth topping 20% for the next three years, plus $1.5 billion of EBITDA by 2028.
Grab Stock Climbs Today After $400 Million Buyback and Taiwan Foodpanda Deal

Grab Stock Climbs Today After $400 Million Buyback and Taiwan Foodpanda Deal

Shares of Grab Holdings climbed 3.4% to $3.77 in Tuesday afternoon trading, following news that the Singapore-based tech firm plans to repurchase as much as $400 million of its own stock within the next four months. This announcement landed just a day after the company inked a $600 million agreement to acquire Delivery Hero’s foodpanda operation in Taiwan. Timing’s key here. Back in February, Grab projected 2026 revenue that trailed Wall Street’s outlook, stirring up renewed doubts about growth in its ride-hailing and delivery businesses—even as management set out a sweeping $500 million buyback. Now, investors are seeing a faster route to cash returns, alongside Grab’s debut outside Southeast Asia.
Grab Holdings (GRAB) Stock Falls Again, Near 52-Week Low, as 2026 Outlook Weighs

Grab Holdings (GRAB) Stock Falls Again, Near 52-Week Low, as 2026 Outlook Weighs

Shares of Grab Holdings dropped 1.1% to $3.71 on Friday, following a 3.6% slide the previous session. The stock is now hovering much closer to its 52-week low at $3.36, well off its $6.62 peak. Investors remain wary about the Southeast Asian ride-hailing and delivery company's softer near-term outlook. That’s coming into focus as investors weigh Grab’s ability to sustain growth—but now, they’re less interested in its first brush with profitability than in whether it can avoid eroding margins in rides and deliveries. Friday told the story: shares of Uber and Lyft moved higher, highlighting that the selloff in Grab looked more like a company issue than a sector-wide retreat.
13 March 2026
Grab stock today: shares edge up as Philippines fuel relief highlights cost pressure

Grab stock today: shares edge up as Philippines fuel relief highlights cost pressure

Grab Holdings climbed roughly 0.9% to $3.79 early Friday on the Nasdaq, partially clawing back from a 3.6% drop the day before. The Singapore ride-hailing and delivery firm drew attention with new perks for its drivers in the Philippines—fuel rebates, lower commissions, and extra incentives—as gasoline costs surged. That’s coming into play now as Grab works to calm investors after its softer 2026 outlook last month. The latest support package might keep more drivers working in a crucial market, but it also forces investors to consider if added incentives will drag on adjusted EBITDA — earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization — a key profit metric.
13 March 2026
Grab Holdings Stock Price Falls 3% as CEO Share Sale Filing Adds Pressure

Grab Holdings Stock Price Falls 3% as CEO Share Sale Filing Adds Pressure

Grab Holdings shares slipped 3.2% to $3.765 by midday on the Nasdaq this Thursday. A fresh filing revealed Anthony Tan intends to offload as many as 1.2 million common shares, putting the value of that stake around $4.75 million. Shares changed hands between $3.75 and $3.90 during the session. This decline stings for Grab, which was still reeling from its underwhelming February guidance that failed to hit Wall Street’s marks. Shares have slid roughly 26% since closing at $5.08 on Jan. 2. Thursday’s hit came as the broader market also took a knock: the Nasdaq was off 1.36% by midday, with traders fretting over inflation tied to oil and strains in private credit.
12 March 2026
Grab hit by Indonesia’s new Eid bonus rule as driver payouts double and PayLater costs rise

Grab hit by Indonesia’s new Eid bonus rule as driver payouts double and PayLater costs rise

Grab Holdings Limited is upping its holiday cash bonus pool for Indonesian drivers and couriers, now set between 100 billion and 110 billion rupiah. The move follows a new labour ministry circular that raised the minimum payout for eligible partners just before Idul Fitri. The Ministry of Manpower’s new circular—letter No. M/4/HK.04.00/III/2026—raises the mandated Bonus Hari Raya for partners to at least 25% of their average net income over the previous 12 months, up from 20% a year ago, and makes cash payment mandatory at least a week before the holiday, according to Katadata. Grab, GoTo’s Gojek, Maxim, and inDrive together are now on the hook for a combined BHR payout of around 220 billion rupiah to roughly 850,000 online motorbike and taxi drivers, the report said.
5 March 2026
Grab stock slides in New York as tech wobbles; eyes turn to Feb. 11 earnings

Grab stock slides in New York as tech wobbles; eyes turn to Feb. 11 earnings

NEW YORK, Jan 29, 2026, 10:52 AM EST — Regular session. Shares of Grab Holdings Limited slipped roughly 2.3% on Thursday, continuing a volatile run for the Southeast Asian ride-hailing and delivery company amid a pullback in U.S. tech stocks. The stock closed near $4.43, having opened at $4.52 and fluctuated between $4.42 and $4.57, with around 11.7 million shares traded.

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