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Just caught wind of something pretty significant happening on Wall Street right now. Booking Holdings just pulled off what's being called the biggest stock split announcement to kick off 2026 - a massive 25-for-1 split that went live on April 2nd. For context, this is their largest ever, which tells you something about where the company's headed.
Here's what caught my attention: companies announcing forward stock splits have this interesting track record of absolutely crushing the S&P 500. We're talking about averaging 25.4% returns over 12 months after the announcement drops, compared to the benchmark's typical performance. That's more than double. Since 1980, the data's been pretty consistent on this pattern.
What makes this particular split interesting is the company behind it. Booking's shares were trading around $4,000 before the split - yeah, you read that right. That kind of price point naturally filters out a lot of retail investors who can't access fractional shares through their broker. After the split, we're looking at roughly $160 per share, which fundamentally changes who can participate.
The company's been on an absolute tear over the past 25 years - up roughly 27,400% including dividends. That kind of performance doesn't happen by accident. A lot of it comes down to their Connected Trip strategy, where they've basically turned individual bookings into entire travel ecosystems. You book a flight, suddenly you're seeing car rentals, hotels, and attractions all integrated together. They're keeping way more revenue in-house compared to competitors.
There's also the share buyback angle worth mentioning. Since 2014, Booking's repurchased over 38% of their outstanding shares. For a company with solid earnings growth, that kind of consistent buyback program can meaningfully move the needle on earnings per share.
The broader pattern here is interesting too - stock split announcements tend to attract retail participation, and historically these companies tend to be the ones actually executing better than their peers. They're not doing splits because they're struggling; they're doing them because they've earned the ability to.
Obviously, whether to buy now is a different question entirely. The Motley Fool analyst team apparently has their own list of 10 stocks they think are better positioned right now, and Booking didn't make that particular cut. Worth checking out if you're thinking about positioning yourself around this kind of market opportunity.