#86 | Booking Holdings Deep Dive | The World's Best Online Travel Agency?
Most companies struggle to stay afloat in the hyper-competitive and efficient world of online travel, but Booking Holdings ain't one of them.
From a small Dutch startup to a $135+ billion market cap giant. In this episode we uncover the secret sauce behind their unrivaled success and how they’re redefining the future of travel booking.
Perfect for investors, industry insiders, and travel enthusiasts, this episode offers an inside look at the machine behind your next trip.
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1 SPEAKER_00: Welcome back to another TDI Premium Deep Dive.
In today's episode, we'll be diving into a duopoly in the
online travel agency world.
From a small Dutch startup to becoming the largest player in
the industry.
This is a deep dive into the machine booking holdings.
Enjoy! But by the efficiency of the underlying systems that
connect global supply with fragmented demand.
At the apex of this industry is Booking Holdings, a
multinational that has evolved from a Dutch startup into what
is arguably the most efficient profit-generating machine in the
history of travel.
While competitors like Airbnb or CTRIP or Trip.com capture the
cultural imagination, and giants like Google control the gateways
of Discovery, Booking Holdings has built a very strong mode,
predicated on performance marketing, conversion
optimization, and a massive self-reinforcing network effect.
This is a company that processes over 1 billion room nights
annually and holds a dominant 60% market share in the European
travel sector.
Now we have to start in Amsterdam.
The story of Booking Holdings begins with a radical departure
from traditional European startup culture.
Founded in 1996 in Amsterdam by Geertjan Bruinsma, the original
entity, Booking.com, was built upon a simple yet revolutionary
premise.
Hotel reservations should be binding and bookable online
through one single unified platform.
In an era where the internet was still in its infancy, this
required a level of operational pragmatism that remains a
hallmark of the company today.
The early technical infrastructure of the
organization was famously described as being held together
with digital spit and glue, utilizing faxes and manual
scripts to bridge the gap between the primitive web pages
and hotel reception desks.
Now, unlike the American counterparts, which often
pursued growth through aggressive venture capital
funding, Booking.com developed a culture of extreme frugalty and
cautious profitability.
This deeply Dutch approach to business meant that growth was
financed through the internal cash flow rather than debt or
outside equity.
Now the most important moment in the company's history occurred
in 2005, when the American firm Priceline.com acquired
Booking.com for only$135 million.
At the time, Priceline was known primarily for its name your own
price model.
But the acquisition allowed it to change towards a high-volume,
commission-based model that Booking.com has now perfected.
By 2018, the parent company was renamed to Booking Holdings, to
reflect the reality that Booking.com had become its most
vital business unit, accounting for almost 90% of all revenue.
The holding company structure now manages a portfolio of
market leaders across several niches, basically creating a
multifortacle travel ecosystem.
For example, obviously Booking.com, which is global,
the heart of the group, but also Priceline, which focuses mostly
on North America, Agoda, which focuses mostly on Asia Pacific,
Rentalcars.com, which operates globally, Kayak, which operates
globally, and OpenTable, which is mostly for restaurant
reservations, diversifying into local experiences.
This diversification allows the holding company to capture
different segments of the traveler's journey, from initial
discovery on kayak to the final restaurant reservation on open
table, all while using the massive back-end inventory of
the core accommodation platforms.
Now the competitive advantage of booking holdings is often
internalized as the machine, a term that signifies a
systematic, data-driven approach to every aspect of the user
experience.
Booking.com does not attempt to change the world or create a
lifestyle brand.
It focuses only on booking hotel rooms better than any other
entity.
This focus is manifest in three specific areas.
Inventory depth, conversion optimization through lots of A-B
testing, and performance marketing scale.
The core strength of the platform is a massive global
network effect.
The platform has over 3.3 million properties, and this
inventory is balanced with close to 500,000 traditional hotels
and motels, and over 3 million alternative accommodations such
as villas and apartments.
And while Airbnb reports more active listings, Booking.com
often rents out more individual rooms, because its listings
typically include traditional hotels with dozens or hundreds
of rooms, whereas Airbnb focuses on individual residences.
For property owners, the value proposition of the platform is
existential.
Many independent hotels suffer from low occupancy rates,
frequently as low as 30%, while their fixed costs remain
constant.
Online travel agencies provide the necessary demand to fill
these rooms.
But this relationship is also characterized as a frenemy
dynamic.
Because while OTAs provide the marketing arm that small hotels
cannot afford, they also extract commissions ranging from 15 to
30% and historically enforced price parity clauses that
prevented hotels from offering lower prices on their own
websites.
The next part is A-B testing.
While competitors like Airbnb invest in high-end design and
emotional branding almost, booking holdings invest in the
science of conversion.
The platform is the result of millions of incremental
experiments aimed at maximizing the profitability that the
visitor will complete a booking.
Early in its history, the team discovered that only one in 10
experiments yielded a positive result.
But those that did were instantly implemented across the
platform.
A good example of this A-B testing is the implementation of
scarcity cues.
Phrases like only a few rooms left or 15 people are looking at
this property were proven through data to increase
conversion rates, even if they were criticized by some for
being unrefined in terms of design.
This culture of testing ensures that the user interface is
optimized for actual human behavior, rather than aesthetic
trends.
And you can test this out yourself because comparing
Airbnb to the booking website is like looking at the 1990s
platform and a high-end design platform for Airbnb.
The difference is quite striking.
But the technical edge is difficult to replicate because
it requires massive volume of traffic to achieve statistical
significance.
A volume that only an entity of booking scale can basically
generate.
The next weapon is marketing.
Booking Holdings is one of the world's most sophisticated
practitioners of performance marketing.
In 2024, for example, the company invested over$7 billion
in marketing, accounting for 31% of their revenue.
This spend is primarily focused on search engine marketing
through Google AdWords.
And by creating millions of highly targeted landing pages
and bidding aggressively on long-tail search terms, the
company turns advertising into a repeatable money multiplier,
where every unit of currency invested generates a pretty
predictable return in booking commissions.
And this creates a virtual cycle.
Higher conversion rates from A-B testing allows the company to
bid more on the keywords than its competitors, which drives
more traffic, which in turn provides more data for further
conversion optimization.
The company's head of marketing and the former Google executive
has said that for the infrequent purchase behavior associated
with travel, search engines are the one door through which the
new customer enters the ecosystem.
Booking Holdings is characterized by a high margin
capital line model.
It has shown to be remarkably resilient across economic
cycles.
The company's revenue growth stabilized 12-15% pre-pandemic,
exploded during the recovery phase to 61% in 2021, but has
since then begun to normalize again towards historical
averages.
And there is a significant shift towards a merchant model, which
increasingly supplements the traditional agency model.
Now the difference between an agency and a merchant model is
this.
For example, the agency model is different on payment collection,
revenue timing, working capital, and cross-selling.
For payment collection, the hotel collects from a guest a
check-in.
When looking at revenue timing, the commission is paid
post-checkout.
The merchant model is a little different.
Booking collects revenue from the guests at checkout.
Booking then pays the hotel post-check-in.
This results in a high float where booking holding holds the
money up front.
And this allows them for easier cross-selling, part of the
connected trip.
And the merchant model has become a primary growth driver.
And the transition to this model is not merely a change in
accounting, but is a fundamental change to becoming a
fintech-enabled travel provider.
Because by acting as the merchant of record, booking
holdings can earn interest on the massive float of customers'
funds held between booking and stay.
This model also allows the company to capture foreign
exchange spreads and provide virtual credit cards to hotels,
which often generate additional rebates for the platform.
When you look at the financials, you'll see a consistent
disparity between net income and free cash flow.
This is a testament to the power of the merchant model, because
it allows for deferred payments.
Because booking retains customer payments until the service is
completed, it operates with a highly favorable working capital
cycle that provides ample liquidity for its aggressive
capital allocation strategy.
Let's talk about that for a second.
The management of booking has established a reputation for
being exceptionally disciplined and frugal in its approach to
capital deployment.
With capital expenditures structurally low, less than 2%
of revenue, the vast majority is available to reinvestment or
shareholder returns.
For example, in 2023, the company deployed over$10 billion
into share repurchases.
This is part of their strategy to reduce the number of
outstanding shares and boost EPS.
And while Booking Holdings has historically used acquisitions
to expand its footprint, like Agoda or Rentalcars.com or even
OpenTable, the regulatory climate has restricted this
path.
In 2023, European Commission blocked Bookings planned$1.7
billion acquisition of Flugo Group, a flight booking
provider.
And this intervention shows us that the company may struggle to
grow through major acquisitions in the future, which forces a
greater focus on organic development.
So let's talk about the competitive advantage.
The landscape of online travel is undergoing a structural
realignment, with Booking Holdings finding itself
positioned between traditional OTAs, lifestyle platforms, and
the rise of direct booking tools.
Now the first is obviously the duel with Airbnb.
Airbnb remains the most significant long-term competitor
to Booking Holdings, but the two companies operate with different
philosophies.
Booking is optimized for the value flexible traveler and the
business professional, who wants reliability, ease of payment,
and lots of hotel options.
While Airbnb is more optimized for the experienced seeker and
the traveler who values uniqueness and design.
Recent trends suggest a convergence of these models.
Airbnb's 2025 releases indicate it is adopting the Booking.com
playbook by easing cancellation policies and increasingly adding
hotels to the platform.
Conversely, Booking.com has mastered the operational
plumbing of short-term rentals, offering managers faster, more
reliable payouts and a multi-vertical ecosystem that
Airbnb does not have.
And while Airbnb holds the brand as a loyalty program advantage,
Booking's Genius Program provides a real transactional
loyalty that drives more predictable booking flows across
seasons.
Especially in North America, have gained power through
massive loyalty programs as well.
Hilton, which has over 180 million members, or Marriott,
which has over 200 million members, now use these programs
to offer discounts for direct bookings, undercutting the
prices found on, for example, Airbnb or booking.
A practical study of New York and Barcelona revealed that
Hilton was always cheaper when booked through its own website,
which is a real danger if they bypass the OTAs.
For smaller, independent hotels, however, the direct booking
battle is much harder to win, because the marketing spend gap
between hotels and OTAs has reached unprecedented levels.
Booking leads, obviously, with over$7 billion in spend, but the
global industry's collective marketing spend is only a
fraction of that amount.
And the disparity ensures that most independent properties
remain dependent on booking holdings for visibility.
Now the most significant, immediate risk to booking
holdings is not a competitor, but a regulatory shift in its
most important market, Europe.
As the world's largest online travel agency with a 60% market
share in Europe, the company has attracted the scrutiny of the
European Commission.
In May 2024, Booking Holdings was designated as a gatekeeper
under the EU's Digital Markets Act, which forced fundamental
changes in how booking operates.
Now the price parity clauses, which previously prevented
hotels from offering better rates on their own websites, are
now prohibited through the EEA.
Furthermore, booking is now banned from taking penantive
actions, such as increasing commission rates or delisting
properties, against hotels that offer lower prices on their own
websites.
And while these changes theoretically weaken booking's
competitive advantage, the company has countered by
focusing on its superior conversion rates and data
transparency.
Beyond regulation, the rise of artificial intelligence is
another major shift in how travel is discovered and booked.
Because Booking Holdings is built by controlling what
travelers see on their screens, and that control is now
fragmenting across a dozen of AI platforms.
In 24 and 25, the travel discovery journey began to
migrate away from traditional search engines towards AI
assistance.
OpenAI's Lance of Operator, an agent capable of browsing the
web and completing bookings autonomously, illustrates this
change.
Booking.com and Priceline were launch partners for this
initiative, but the move carries a hidden danger.
When a traveler asks an AI assistant to find a hotel, the
selection criteria happen inside the model's neural network
rather than on Bookings.com's interface.
As traffic changes across ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, and
Apple Siri embedded agents, Booking.com transitions from
selling placement to hotels to buying placement within these
models.
While management has said they are excited about the potential
of AI to enhance the connected trip and streamline operations,
they must balance this risk and opportunity carefully.
Now obviously they aren't sitting still.
They are countering this discovery risk by embedding
itself more deeply into the platforms travelers already use.
And by allowing other platforms like Uber, Wix or even local
marketplaces to use Booking's inventory through a specialized
fintech-driven product, the company can capture volume even
if the traveler never sits on its core site.
Now let's briefly touch on management.
The CEO of Booking Holdings is Glenn Vogel, which is widely
regarded as some of the most capable people in the digital
OTA service sector.
They are quite low profile for such a large company, which
focuses mostly on capital allocation and management
oversight instead of being in the public eye.
Since taking the helm in 2017, Glen Vogel has moved the company
through the existential crisis of the pandemic, but also the
recovery.
Described as the most frugal CEO ever, Vogel's interaction with
employees has often been focused on addressing cultural
complacency and steering the organization towards new
ventures, like the in-house payment system.
And his background as an investment banker is shown in
the company's aggressive buyback program and its focus on
operational excellence.
The incentives at booking are heavily aligned with shareholder
returns.
Rewards are based on increasing revenue and EBITDA while issuing
as few shares as possible.
The company's SBC as percentage of revenue is notably lower than
that of the competitors like Airbnb or even fintechs like
Agen, which shows a high degree of respect for the equity
holders.
But rate Booking Holdings as a quality compounder, a company
that generates high returns on capital and can reinvest that
capital effectively over long periods of time.
Booking Holdings operates a highly scalable business where
each additional dollar of revenue flows through the bottom
line with minimal incremental cost.
Net revenue per employee remains amongst the highest in the
sector.
Gross margins are close to 90%, with free cash flow margins over
33%.
Return on capital employed is over 44%, while CapEx to revenue
is under 2%, which is very capital light, which minimizes
reinvestment risk.
They also hold over$17 billion in cash, which allows them to
pay back debt very easily.
They now trade at a 7% free cash flow yield, which makes the
company quite attractively valued, especially considering.
Historical valuations.
I'd like to touch the connected trip one more time.
Because the connected trip is the company's primary vehicle
for expanding its share of the travel market.
By integrating airline tickets, car rentals, or even museum
visits into a single transaction, booking holdings
can increase its total take rate and improve the user experience.
Car rental services, primarily through rentalcars.com, already
provide online rentals in over 52,000 locations worldwide.
Historical data shows that rentalcars.com had a net margin
of approximately 6% in the past.
With full integration into the booking ecosystem, operational
leverage, this could push the margin towards 10%.
The experiences market represents an even larger
untapped opportunity.
While the market for experiences is smaller than for lodging, the
profit margins are comparable to hotel commissions.
And if booking can successfully cross-sell these services to
massive pools of accommodation bookers, this could
significantly enhance its lifetime customer value.
Now predicting the future of booking holdings requires an
understanding of its cyclical nature, because the industry is
sensitive to global economic conditions and the potential for
new outbreaks or travel bans.
But to give you an idea of how Booking Holdings is valued, if
you assume the company can grow its revenue for 15% for the next
five years, maintain a profit margin of 22%, and an exit
multiple of 25%, you could expect a 17% kegger return from
here, excluding dividends and buybacks.
Now if we lower the assumptions to 8% kegger growth for the next
5 years and an exit multiple of 20, you can expect a 5% Kagger
return the coming years, excluding dividends and
buybacks.
Now let's wrap up this booking holdings deep dive.
With a quick summary.
Booking holdings stands as the example of how a singular focus
on operational efficiency and A B testing can create such a
strong company.
By mastering the machine, a technical and cultural
infrastructure predicated on conversion optimization and
massive performance marketing, booking has secured an almost
unsaleable position in the OTA market.
The transition to the merchant model and the pursuit of the
connected trip is a big tailwind.
It aims to be the comprehensive travel partner and fintech
facilitator.
The capital allocation strategy, which is defined by massive
share buybacks and a new dividend, demonstrates a high
degree of alignment with long-term shareholders.
We also like the fact that the CEO is known as the most frugal
CEO in the world.
However, the company is facing a threat of regulatory constraint
and technological fragmentation.
Definitely something to keep in mind.
If the rise of Agentic AI Discovery threatens to avoid and
disintermediate booking, the very interface they built for
the last two decades is basically worthless.
Now for you, me, and investors, the fundamental question is
whether the machine can adapt to the world where discovery is
managed by neural networks and pricing is dictated by
regulators.
If booking can successfully use its massive supply-side
relationships and the fintech infrastructure to become a
backend for these new AI discovery agents, they can keep
compounding for a long time.
If however the shift to AI leads to fragmentation of traffic and
the loss of pricing power, even the most efficient machine will
struggle to maintain its historical growth rate.
Ultimately, Booking Holdings is a high-quality company and
remains a bet on the human desire for travel, backed by a
culture that meshes everything and assumes nothing.
I hope you enjoyed this TDI deep dive into Booking Holdings and
we'll see you in the next one!