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Booking Holdings (NASDAQ: BKNG | BKNG Price Prediction) is days away from executing the largest stock split in its history. Split-adjusted trading begins April 6, 2026, following a board-approved 25-for-1 forward split effective April 2, 2026. For a stock that closed at $4,117.51 on March 30, the split will bring shares into a price range accessible to far more individual investors.
From Reverse Split Survivor to Historic Forward Split
After the dot-com bust, the company then known as Priceline executed a 1-for-6 reverse split to avoid delisting. The 25-for-1 forward split mirrors that dark chapter in reverse, reflecting a company that has grown into one of the world’s largest travel platforms, operating Booking.com, Priceline, Agoda, KAYAK, and OpenTable across more than 220 countries and territories.
Stock splits carry no fundamental change to a company’s value. Every shareholder receives more shares at a proportionally lower price, leaving total holdings unchanged. The benefit is accessibility: lower per-share prices reduce barriers for retail investors, improve options market liquidity, and can broaden institutional index eligibility.
What History Shows About Post-Split Performance
Recent mega-cap splits offer a clear lesson: underlying business performance drives returns, not the split mechanics.
| Company | Split | Split Date | 1-Year Return After Split |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) | 4-for-1 | Aug 31, 2020 | +18.42% |
| Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) | 10-for-1 | Jun 10, 2024 | +18.24% |
| Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) | 20-for-1 | Jul 18, 2022 | +13.51% |
| Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) | 20-for-1 | Jun 6, 2022 | +1.46% |
| Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) | 3-for-1 | Aug 25, 2022 | −19.41% |
Tesla fell nearly 20% in the year following its split. Amazon was essentially flat. Apple and Nvidia gained because their businesses were accelerating; the split was incidental.
The Business Case Behind Booking’s Split
Booking’s fundamentals support the bull case. Q4 2025 revenue rose 16.1% year-over-year to $6.349 billion, beating estimates of $6.135 billion. Full-year 2025 free cash flow reached $9.086 billion, up 15.1% year-over-year. CEO Glenn Fogel stated: “We are pleased to report strong results for 2025, delivering double-digit revenue growth, expanding Adjusted EBITDA margin by 193 basis points, and accelerating room night growth in every quarter.”
The company also announced a 9.4% dividend increase to $10.50 per share for Q1 2026 on the same day as the split announcement, reinforcing a shareholder-friendly posture. Management guides for mid-teens adjusted EPS growth in full-year 2026.
The stock has pulled back 22.6% year-to-date from a 52-week high of $5,839.41, a level that analysts at Kiplinger have highlighted, citing strong business performance and increased marketability from the split. The consensus analyst target stands at $5,802.23, with 30 Buy ratings and zero Sell ratings among covering analysts. Upcoming catalysts include the FIFA World Cup 2026, explicitly cited by analysts as a significant travel demand driver.
Investors should weigh those tailwinds against real headwinds: bearish technical signals, geopolitical uncertainty, and AI disruption concerns have pressured the stock in recent weeks. Consumer sentiment remains weak, with the University of Michigan index at 53.3, well below the 80-point neutral threshold. The split improves accessibility. Investors should watch Q1 2026 earnings results, room night growth trends, and early FIFA World Cup 2026 booking data as the key signals for whether the business momentum justifies the current valuation.