Today: 11 June 2026
Grab Shares Trade Near 52-Week Lows With Eyes on Taiwan Foodpanda Deal
11 June 2026
3 mins read

Grab Shares Trade Near 52-Week Lows With Eyes on Taiwan Foodpanda Deal

New York, June 11, 2026, 09:03 ET

  • Grab ended Wednesday at $3.27, slipping 0.91%. Pre-market quotes Thursday stayed near that mark.
  • Grab’s latest issue centers on its partner-commitments package in Taiwan, which is linked to its $600 million deal for foodpanda Taiwan that’s still pending.
  • The stock is sitting just above its 52-week low even after strong Q1 growth.

Grab Holdings shares traded close to a one-year low on the Nasdaq in early Thursday action after a weak previous session. The company is working to address regulatory and labor worries tied to its Taiwan expansion. Shares finished at $3.27 on Wednesday, off 0.91% from a $3.30 Tuesday finish. Pre-market quotes put GRAB at $3.27.

The price is just a cent above the 52-week low of $3.26, according to Google Finance, and well off the 52-week high of $6.62. Investors now want to know if Grab can turn growth into lasting profit as it expands in Taiwan and digital banking.

Grab gave an update out of Taiwan on June 9. The company set out its promises to delivery partners and merchants before it closes its planned takeover of foodpanda Taiwan. That deal still needs regulatory sign-off and other conditions to be met. “We approach Taiwan with deep respect and humility,” Yee Wee Tang, Grab’s group managing director of operations, said in a statement. Grab

Grab set out a straightforward plan: free kit and delivery bags for current foodpanda riders, paperwork turned around in under 24 hours, a special hotline to help with the switch, weekly cash-out, less waiting thanks to its Just-In-Time Allocation tech, and a way for merchants to move profiles and cut downtime. Grab also said it brought on an independent Taiwanese cybersecurity adviser and is seeking talks with regulators and unions.

The Taiwan deal is shaping up as Grab’s near-term test. In March, Grab said it would buy Delivery Hero’s foodpanda delivery business in Taiwan for $600 million in cash. If it goes through, Taiwan would become Grab’s ninth market and its first move outside Southeast Asia. The company expects the deal to close in the second half of 2026 and said it should add at least $60 million in incremental adjusted EBITDA in 2028. Adjusted EBITDA is a company metric that leaves out interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.

Uber scrapped its $950 million plan to buy Delivery Hero’s foodpanda business in Taiwan after regulators shot it down. Taiwan’s Fair Trade Commission said the deal could give Uber up to 90% market share, risking higher prices, according to .

Grab’s latest numbers for the first quarter aren’t drawing investor concern. Revenue climbed 24% from a year ago to $955 million, and On-Demand GMV also picked up 24% to $6.1 billion. Profit for the period came in at $120 million, while adjusted EBITDA rose 46% to $154 million. GMV—gross merchandise value—measures the total transaction value on the platform before various deductions.

Investors want to see more. Grab paid out $650 million in incentives during the quarter, with partner incentives rising 42% from a year ago. The company said On-Demand incentives as a share of GMV increased due to festive demand and higher fuel costs for driver-partners. Margins remain in focus, not only revenue growth.

Management is pitching profitable growth and capital returns. In the Q1 report, CFO Peter Oey said Grab is sticking with “disciplined capital allocation to drive profitable growth.” The company put trailing-12-month adjusted free cash flow at $489 million. That’s the cash left after running the business and capital outlays, and investors watch that number for buybacks, acquisitions, and giving more room on the balance sheet. Q4 Capital

Superbank in Indonesia is another swing factor to watch. Grab said in May it would move to consolidate Superbank, following Singtel’s plan to transfer its interest in the digital bank to GXS Bank, the digital banking unit that Grab and Singtel jointly own. As of April 2026, Grab said Superbank served over 6 million customers and delivered its first full-year profit in FY2025. The bank saw assets jump 72% and net interest income climb 84% year over year that month.

Wall Street analysts keep coming out bullish even as shares lag. Google Finance shows 14 Buy ratings for GRAB in the last three months, with an average 12-month target at $6.12. The stock trades at $3.27. That’s the spread—analysts expect operating leverage to play out, while the market is sticking with execution risk.

Plenty could trip things up. Taiwan regulators might stall or shut down the foodpanda deal. Extra costs tied to partner protections could climb too high. Margins could take more hits from fuel and incentives. Superbank consolidation brings more credit, regulatory and integration risks to Grab’s story. Grab has flagged macro, industry, business and regulatory dangers as possible reasons for its actual results to diverge from guidance, calling out Superbank integration and competition, too.

The next big test isn’t ride volume. It’s about Taiwan—if approval advances, it could set up a second-half close. Also, watch how Grab handles group guidance at its August Q2 results call, with Superbank’s results added to Financial Services.

Stock Market Today

  • Wall Street Edges Up as AI Stocks Rebound and Market Stabilizes
    June 11, 2026, 10:18 AM EDT. Wall Street showed resilience on Thursday with the S&P 500 rising 0.2% and the Dow Jones advancing 221 points amid a turbulent week for artificial intelligence (AI) stocks. AI shares, including Marvell Technology and chipmakers Intel and Applied Materials, led gains after volatile swings triggered by soaring expectations. Meanwhile, Oracle shares dropped 11.7% despite strong profits, highlighting investor concerns over heavy AI spending. Oil prices remained stable despite fresh conflict in the Middle East, with Brent crude up 0.1% at $93.15 per barrel. Inflation worries persist, prompting the European Central Bank to raise rates for the first time, signaling concerns over global price pressures and geopolitical tensions impacting markets.

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