Expedia sees higher first-quarter margin, muted 2026

February 12, 2026 5:13 PM UTC

Figurines are seen in front of the Expedia logo in this illustration taken February 27, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

By Anshuman Tripathy and Aishwarya Jain

Feb ‌12 (Reuters) - Online travel ​platform ​Expedia forecast a higher first-quarter adjusted core profit margin on Thursday, helped by one-time gains and betting on strong demand from business clients, ‌but sounded cautious on its full-year outlook.

Expedia shares fell more than 5% ⁠in extended trade, after the company said it remains "appropriately cautious due to ongoing macro uncertainty" as ‌consumer spending remains uneven due ‌to rising prices of goods amid a shifting U.S. trade policy.

While first-quarter margin expansion will see a boost from a reduction in headcount and marketing and cloud ​costs, the rest of the year could be relatively muted, said Expedia's finance chief, Scott Schenkel.

The company expects adjusted core profit margin to grow 3 ⁠to 4 percentage points in the first quarter of 2026, compared with a rise of 1.05 percentage points in ​2025.

However, for the full year, it expects adjusted core profit margin to slow down to a rise of 1 to 1.25 percentage ​points, compared with an increase of 2.4 percentage ‌points in 2025.

Despite the weak margin forecast, the Vrbo parent's full-year gross bookings projection of $127 billion to $129 billion is higher than ⁠analysts' average estimate of $125.95 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

The business-to-business (B2B) segment, which includes customers such as airlines, offline travel agents, financial institutions, has benefited from the addition of new ⁠clients.

Fourth-quarter gross booking in its B2B division jumped 24%, compared with 5% in its direct-to-consumer unit.

Online ​travel agencies are also getting a lift from cost-conscious travelers seeking value through deals and discounts.

"We had 70% more partners participating on our Black Friday sales than we have ever had," ‌CEO Ariane Gorin told Reuters, adding 30% of Expedia's fourth-quarter bookings came from inventory that included deals.

The Hotels.com parent's adjusted profit ‌of $3.78 per share for the fourth quarter ended December 31 was up from $2.39 per share ⁠a year earlier. Analysts, on an ‌average, had expected $3.36 apiece.

Total revenue ​rose 11.4% to $3.54 billion, also beating estimates of $3.42 billion.

(Reporting by Anshuman Tripathy and Aishwarya Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and ‌Subhranshu Sahu)



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