Today’s Change
(-1.58%) $-0.06
Current Price
$3.73
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$16B
Day’s Range
$3.70 – $3.95
52wk Range
$3.36 – $6.62
Volume
2M
Avg Vol
47M
Gross Margin
43.22%
Grab (GRAB 1.58%), a Southeast Asia superapp for mobility, delivery, and digital finance, closed Wednesday at $3.73, down 1.58%. The stock slid lower after earlier gains tied to a $400 million accelerated share buyback and a $600 million deal for Taiwanese upstart Foodpanda. Trading volume reached 49.6 million shares, 6.9% above the three-month average of 46.4 million shares. Grab IPO’d in 2020 and has fallen 69% since.
How the markets moved today
The S&P 500 added 0.54% to finish Wednesday’s session at 6,592, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.77% to close at 21,930. Within the software app space, ride-hailing peers Uber Technologies closed at $73.08 (+1.02%) and Lyft ended at $13.26 (+0.76%), outpacing Grab’s pullback.
What this means for investors
Grab stock hasn’t moved much following the news of its $400 million buyback and $600 million deal to expand into Taiwan through its Foodpanda acquisition. While the market doesn’t seem overly enthused, I think the moves make a lot of sense for Grab, given its $6.4 billion net cash balance versus its market cap of only $15 billion.
Two years after Uber tried to acquire Foodpanda for $950 million — but was blocked by regulators — Grab looks to snap the company up at a 37% discount. Meanwhile, with Grab’s stock down 42% from its 52-week high, despite reaching profitability and positive free cash flow over the last year, its buyback plans are also a solid use of its cash balance. I’ll be closely monitoring this promising growth stock in 2026.
Josh Kohn-Lindquist has positions in Lyft and Uber Technologies. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Grab, Lyft, and Uber Technologies. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.