
Flight Centre Travel Group Ltd (ASX: FLT) shares are down around 25% since this time last year.
That’s not surprising. Travel is cyclical. Geopolitical tensions can weigh on short-term demand and ultimately investor sentiment. After all, consumers can pull back quickly when uncertainty rises.
But when I look at Flight Centre, I’m not thinking about the next quarter. I’m thinking about where the business could be in five to ten years.
And on that time frame, I think the opportunity looks far more compelling.
The recovery is still playing out
Flight Centre’s latest half-year result showed profit growth despite what management described as a “challenging global trading climate.”
Underlying profit before tax rose 4% to $124.6 million, while underlying EBITDA increased 9%. Total transaction value hit a record $12.5 billion, up 7%.
This isn’t a company in decline. It is one that has rebuilt profitability following COVID, tightened its cost base, and is now leveraging scale again.
Importantly, management reaffirmed full-year guidance of $315 million to $350 million in underlying profit before tax. That tells me confidence remains intact despite short-term volatility.
Technology is strengthening the moat
One aspect of Flight Centre that I think is underappreciated is its investment in AI and digital capability.
The company is embedding artificial intelligence (AI) tools across both corporate and leisure segments to improve productivity, reduce manual handling, and enhance personalisation. Management highlighted that more than 8 million emails have already been processed and prioritised more efficiently using AI tools.
This matters.
Travel may look like a commoditised industry from the outside. But when you combine scale, trusted brands, corporate relationships, and AI-enabled productivity, you start to build a meaningful competitive advantage.
Flight Centre isn’t just a retail storefront network anymore. It’s evolving into a technology-enabled global travel platform.
A growing ASX dividend stock
If you’re buying this as an ASX dividend stock, income is a key part of the story.
According to CommSec, consensus estimates point to fully-franked dividends per share of 49 cents in FY26, 57 cents in FY27, and 57.5 cents in FY28.
At the current share price of $11.95, that implies forward dividend yields of roughly 4.1% for FY26, 4.8% for FY27, and just under 5% for FY28.
For a business that is still rebuilding earnings momentum and guiding to further profit growth, I think that looks attractive.
And unlike some high-yield names, this dividend is being paid from a business that is expanding, not shrinking.
Looking past the headlines
Yes, short-term travel demand can wobble. War in the Middle East, economic slowdowns, or currency volatility can all temporarily affect booking volumes.
But history suggests that travel demand rebounds. People continue to prioritise experiences, holidays, and corporate travel.
Flight Centre has survived multiple downturns over the decades. It has emerged from the COVID crisis leaner, more disciplined, and more digitally capable.
At $11.95, down 25% from last year, I think the market is still pricing in more fragility than the business deserves.
Foolish takeaway
Flight Centre is not a defensive utility. It will always carry cyclical risk.
But it is a global travel leader with record transaction volumes, improving productivity, reaffirmed guidance, and a growing fully-franked dividend.
For long-term investors willing to look beyond near-term geopolitical noise, I think this ASX dividend stock looks like a compelling buy to hold for years.
The post 1 Australian dividend stock down 25% to buy now and hold for years appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
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Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Flight Centre Travel Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.