Down 36% in 2026, Flight Centre shares slip again on new fintech update

Paper plane made of money in different currencies flies through the sky.

A new fintech investment has not been enough to stop the selling in Flight Centre Travel Group Ltd (ASX: FLT) shares today.

The travel stock is down 3.31% to $9.65 at the time of writing, leaving shareholders with more pain after a difficult few weeks.

Flight Centre shares have now lost around 18% over the past month and 36% since the start of 2026.

So, what is Flight Centre buying into?

What Flight Centre is buying

According to the release, Flight Centre made a US$5 million investment in Blockskye, a Boston-based corporate travel payments technology company.

Blockskye has developed BMAX, a blockchain-powered payment and expense settlement platform.

The company says the platform helps reduce reliance on traditional payment methods, including credit cards.

It also supports automated reconciliation and better reporting for travel programs.

The aim is to make corporate travel payments easier to manage, with fewer manual steps and better visibility over spending.

Flight Centre Corporate CEO Chris Galanty said the investment gives the group access to emerging payment technology. He noted it could help solve challenges around corporate cards and expense management.

Once embedded in Flight Centre’s technology suite, the platform could lift efficiency, reduce costs, and improve transparency for corporate clients.

Targeting bigger US customers

Alongside the investment, Flight Centre also plans to work with Blockskye and KAYAK for Business on a new partnership targeting the US enterprise corporate travel market.

KAYAK is a travel search platform that lets users compare flights, hotels, car hire, and other travel options across different providers.

The planned offering will combine Flight Centre’s global service infrastructure and supplier network with KAYAK for Business’ booking experience.

Blockskye will provide the payments platform, including automated reconciliation and enhanced real-time financial visibility.

Flight Centre said Blockskye already has an established US customer base. This includes Fortune 100 companies and a number of top 10 enterprise-level travel customers.

Foolish Takeaway

Flight Centre’s Blockskye investment looks like a sensible move in corporate travel, especially if it helps cut payment friction and improve client reporting.

However, investors are not rushing back into the stock today.

A US$5 million investment is not huge in the context of Flight Centre’s broader business. The market may also want to see how quickly this technology can be integrated and whether it makes a visible difference to earnings.

The weaker reaction also needs to be seen against a difficult recent backdrop.

After a 35% fall in 2026, investors may want evidence that new technology investments can help turn momentum around.

The post Down 36% in 2026, Flight Centre shares slip again on new fintech update appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Aaron Teboneras 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.