Overview:

GBTG opened at $9.31, up 57% from its Friday close of $5.90, after Long Lake Management — backed by General Catalyst and Alpha Wave — agreed to acquire Amex GBT for $9.50 per share in an all-cash deal valued at $6.3 billion. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 170-183 points at the open while the S&P 500 traded flat near 7,230. Xanadu Quantum's 293.6 million share registration filing drove XNDU down as much as 68%, erasing months of quantum-hype gains in a single session. GameStop's $55.5 bill

NEW YORK — The opening bell on Monday belonged to one company: Global Business Travel Group, which exploded 57% higher in the first minutes of trade after a $6.3 billion all-cash acquisition offer landed over the weekend — while the rest of the market could barely hold its footing.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this open: the headline noise is enormous, but the actual tape is telling a quieter story. GBTG is a clean deal — 69% of shares are already aligned with the transaction, the premium is locked at $9.50, and the arb spread is a thin $0.19. That spread implies high deal confidence, not a trading opportunity. I’m watching EBAY more closely. The market is pricing Ryan Cohen’s bid as theater, not transaction — $110 versus a $125 offer is a 12% discount that says institutional desks don’t believe TD Bank’s financing holds. Watch this if EBAY breaks above $115: that would signal real positioning shift. The contrarian question worth asking: what if GameStop’s real play here isn’t closing the deal, but forcing eBay’s board to run a formal sale process that surfaces a credible third-party bid?

The S&P 500 opened fractionally lower near 7,230, the Nasdaq added 0.1%, and the Dow shed 170 to 183 points — a range that translates to roughly a 0.3% to 0.4% decline. None of those moves matter much to the traders who spent the weekend reading acquisition filings. Three stories are dominating the first hour: a clean corporate buyout, a quantum-computing name in freefall, and what may be the most audacious unsolicited bid in years.

Data Visual
Monday Open: Key Mover Performance vs. Friday Close (%)
Shows the percentage change at Monday’s open for the session’s four most catalyst-driven names, illustrating the extreme spread between M&A winners and dilution losers.
Monday Open: Key Mover Performance vs. Friday Close (%)
Values in %

The Tape Beneath the Headlines

Zoom out from the special situations and Monday’s open reflects a market caught between competing gravitational forces. Iran tensions have pushed WTI crude above $102 per barrel — up 0.23% to $102.17 — keeping energy names bid and adding an inflationary undercurrent that the Fed cannot ignore. The VIX climbed 2.59% to 17.43, not a panic reading by any measure, but enough to signal that complacency is not the dominant mood today.

Asian markets offered a constructive backdrop overnight. The MSCI Asia Pacific index gained 2.3%, South Korea surged 5.12%, and Taiwan added more than 4% — all of it driven by AI supply-chain momentum and relief that semiconductor export restrictions did not escalate further last week. That optimism did not fully translate to New York, where geopolitical risk is weighing harder on cyclicals. The Dow’s underperformance versus the Nasdaq at the open reflects exactly that divide: old-economy industrials and financials absorbing the Iran premium while mega-cap tech floats on AI tailwinds. For more on whether the index-level calm is masking sector-level stress, see our earlier piece on whether the S&P 500 can hold 7,200 as Fed transition risk builds.

Key Stat
60.2%
The premium Long Lake Management is paying over GBTG’s Friday close — one of the largest premiums in a mid-cap U.S. take-private deal so far in 2026, signaling acquirer conviction that the stock was deeply mispriced.

Amex GBT: When the Arb Is Already Tight

Global Business Travel Group (GBTG) opened at $9.31, up from Friday’s close of $5.90, on news that Long Lake Management — backed by General Catalyst Partners and Alpha Wave Global — has agreed to acquire the company for $9.50 per share in an all-cash transaction valued at approximately $6.3 billion. The deal carries a 60.2% premium and has already secured support from shareholders representing 69% of the company’s outstanding stock, including American Express, Expedia, the Qatar Investment Authority, and BlackRock.

GBTG also reported Q1 2026 results Monday morning: revenue grew 35% year-over-year, adjusted gross profit margin reached 58%, and adjusted EBITDA hit $150 million. The SEC filing confirms American Express will receive approximately $1.5 billion in sale proceeds, generating a pre-tax gain of roughly $975 million.

The arb math is straightforward: at $9.31, the spread to the $9.50 offer is $0.19, or about 2%. With 69% of shares pre-committed, a H2 2026 close timeline, and no financing contingency announced, that spread is tight. Merger arb desks will be buyers, but this is not a wide-spread situation that invites speculative positioning. The deal either closes at $9.50 or it does not — and right now, the market is saying it closes.

Data Visual
GBTG Share Price: Friday Close vs. Acquisition Offer vs. Monday Open ($)
Plots the three key price levels for GBTG traders — Friday’s close, Monday’s opening print, and the $9.50 all-cash offer price — showing how much spread remains for arb players.
GBTG Share Price: Friday Close vs. Acquisition Offer vs. Monday Open ($)
Values in $

GameStop’s eBay Gambit: Bold Bid, Skeptical Market

GameStop submitted a non-binding proposal on May 3 to acquire eBay Inc. for $125 per share — a transaction valued at approximately $55.5 to $56 billion. CEO Ryan Cohen stated that GameStop has secured a $20 billion “highly confident” debt financing letter from TD Bank, and noted the company retains the ability to issue additional stock to fund the remainder. The plan envisions $2 billion in annualized cost reductions: $1.2 billion from sales and marketing, $500 million from G&A, and $300 million from product development.

eBay opened near $110, up roughly 10% from Friday’s close of $104.07 — but 12% below the proposed offer price of $125. That gap is the market’s verdict: institutional investors are treating this as a negotiating tactic or a publicity event, not a transaction. For deeper context on the strategic logic — and why so many desks are calling it a distraction — read our full breakdown: Is GameStop’s $56 Billion eBay Bid the Week’s Wildest Distraction?

Analyst Note
Bernstein, responding to the GameStop-eBay proposal via CNBC: “Why disrupt things?” The firm noted that eBay’s turnaround is “working” with recent execution described as “solid,” and questioned the strategic overlap between the two businesses. Bernstein flagged disruption risk as a primary concern, implying that even if financing materializes, the operational case for combining a legacy retail video game chain with a $56 billion e-commerce platform remains unclear.

The skepticism is warranted. GameStop’s market capitalization is a fraction of eBay’s. A $20 billion financing letter, however “highly confident,” is not committed capital. Cohen’s reference to issuing additional stock introduces dilution risk for GME shareholders at a moment when the stock’s valuation is already difficult to anchor. The consensus read is that this bid goes nowhere. The contrarian read: eBay’s board, now publicly in play, may feel pressure to engage with other potential acquirers — and that process, not GameStop, is the actual catalyst worth tracking.

Xanadu’s Quantum Collapse: Dilution in Real Time

Xanadu Quantum Technologies filed a prospectus to register 293.6 million Class B shares for resale by existing shareholders, plus up to 157,960 warrant shares. The company will receive no proceeds from the resales, except on warrant exercises. The filing covers legacy Xanadu shareholders, Class A conversion shares, private placement participants, and Crane Harbor sponsor shares.

XNDU fell 55% to 68% at the open, trading in a range of $29.50 to $38.44 in early action before pushing toward $11.92 by mid-morning. TipRanks shows a Moderate Buy consensus from two analysts with an average price target of $44 — a target that implied 21.82% upside from pre-filing levels and now looks severely dislocated. The filing did not announce new capital deployment, a product milestone, or a commercial partnership. It registered insider shares for sale. Traders read that signal correctly and moved first. The broader point for quantum-sector investors: hype-driven valuations in early-stage technology names carry registration statement risk that is structural, not episodic. This will not be the last quantum name to see a filing-day flush.

M&A activity is also driving renewed interest in whether big-tech valuations reflect realistic growth assumptions. For perspective on how the market has been pricing AI-linked capital deployment, see our analysis of Meta’s $145 billion AI commitment.

The Levels That Will Define the First Hour

Three names, three very different setups. GBTG is effectively a rate-of-return calculation now — $9.50 minus wherever you buy, divided by time to close. The trade is simple; the question is whether you want 2% over six months in a deal that looks done. EBAY is the live read on M&A sentiment: if it holds above $110 through midday, desks are hedging the possibility that a real process emerges. A fade back toward $107 signals the market is fully dismissing Cohen’s play. XNDU is a cautionary data point for any position in pre-revenue quantum names — the question is not whether this bounces but whether the selling is complete or whether registered shareholders continue to distribute into any strength.

On the index level, the S&P 500’s flat open near 7,230 is the line in the sand. A break below 7,200 on elevated volume would shift the conversation from “flat open” to “distribution day.” The Nasdaq’s slight outperformance reflects AI-sector resilience, but that resilience has been tested before — and the VIX at 17.43 is not a level that guarantees dip buyers step in aggressively. For context on whether last month’s gains have durable foundations, see our review of whether the S&P 500’s best April in six years was built on shaky ground.

Level / Event Value Signal
GBTG deal offer price $9.50 Ceiling for arb buyers; spread of $0.19 from open implies high deal certainty
EBAY key resistance (deal belief threshold) $115 Break above signals real institutional hedging; suggests process risk for eBay’s board
EBAY deal skepticism floor $107 Fade below here confirms market fully discounting GameStop bid as non-event
S&P 500 distribution trigger 7,200 Break below on elevated volume shifts bias from flat to distribution; watch VIX response
XNDU bounce level to watch $15.00 Failure to reclaim $15 intraday suggests registered sellers are actively distributing into any bid

The first hour of this week’s trade has supplied more event-driven volatility than most full sessions. GBTG’s deal is clean and the arb is nearly closed. GameStop’s bid for eBay is audacious on paper and unfinanced in practice — EBAY’s price action will tell you everything you need to know about whether this week’s M&A narrative has legs or expires at the close. Xanadu’s collapse is a sector-wide warning shot for quantum-computing longs. And the broad market, sitting flat to slightly negative, is waiting for a catalyst that none of today’s three stories actually provides. Watch 7,200 on the S&P. Watch $115 on EBAY. Watch whether XNDU can reclaim $15 or continues lower. The rest is noise.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...