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Just caught up on something that's been flying under the radar for most traders – Booking Holdings' historic stock split actually went live earlier this month. This is the kind of move that usually signals something bigger happening under the hood.
So here's what went down: Booking announced back in February that they'd be doing a massive 25-for-1 stock split starting April 2nd. When I first saw the stock split announcements around that time, the share price was sitting at over $4,000, which honestly felt disconnected from what retail traders could actually participate in. After the split executed, we're looking at shares trading around $160 – way more accessible for everyday investors who don't have fractional share access through their broker.
What's wild is the backdrop here. This company has absolutely crushed it over the past 25 years – we're talking a 27,000%+ move when you factor in dividends. That kind of performance doesn't come from nowhere. The real story is their Connected Trip strategy, where they're using AI to turn a single flight booking into this whole ecosystem of hotel stays, car rentals, and attraction purchases. They're basically keeping way more revenue in-house instead of sending users elsewhere.
There's also something that caught my attention about their share buyback program. Since 2014, they've repurchased over 38% of their outstanding shares. For a company with solid earnings growth, that's a serious lever for boosting EPS without actually growing the business operationally.
Historically, companies announcing stock split events like this tend to outperform the broader market. The data shows that since 1980, stocks doing forward splits have averaged around 25% returns in the 12 months following the announcement – basically double what the S&P 500 typically delivers. It's partly because these are usually companies that don't need the split for survival; they're doing it because they're growing so fast that their share price has gotten unwieldy.
I'm not saying this is a screaming buy signal or anything, but when you see major stock split announcements from industry leaders with this kind of track record, it's worth paying attention to what's driving their momentum. The retail investor angle matters too – making shares more nominally affordable keeps more people engaged with the market.