Linde Stock (LIN) After the Bell on Dec. 23, 2025: After-Hours Action, New Analyst Take, and What to Watch Before the Market Opens Dec. 24

Linde Stock (LIN) After the Bell on Dec. 23, 2025: After-Hours Action, New Analyst Take, and What to Watch Before the Market Opens Dec. 24

Linde plc (NASDAQ: LIN) ended Tuesday, December 23, 2025, with a modest gain — and the stock stayed steady in after-hours trading as investors head into a holiday-shortened session on Christmas Eve.

LIN finished the regular session at $425.10, up 0.38%, according to Linde’s own share-price display and market data. [1]

In after-hours trading, the stock was little changed around $425.16 as of late evening, suggesting no major post-close catalyst hit the tape. [2]

With U.S. equities set for an early close on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 (Christmas Eve), the most important “before the open” story for Linde investors may be less about new company headlines — and more about thin liquidity, wider spreads, and the market’s year-end risk posture. [3]

Below is what to know after the bell today and what to watch before tomorrow’s open.


Linde stock price today: where LIN closed and where it traded after hours

Regular-session snapshot (Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025):

  • Close: $425.10 (+0.38%)
  • Open: $423.60
  • High / Low: $425.33 / $423.00
  • Volume: ~1.65 million shares [4]

After-hours snapshot:

  • After-hours quote: $425.16 (+$0.06, +0.01%) late evening
  • After-hours volume: ~84K shares (as of the time of the quote) [5]

That “flat” after-hours tape matters. It suggests Tuesday’s move was primarily a regular-session repricing (broad market + sector flows), not a reaction to a late-breaking Linde-specific announcement.


The broader market backdrop: risk-on tone heading into the holiday session

Linde’s small gain came on a generally positive day for U.S. equities. Market data reports showed the S&P 500 finishing higher and the Dow also up, reinforcing a supportive macro tone into year-end trading. [6]

For Linde specifically, this matters because the stock often behaves like a “quality industrial compounder” in the eyes of the market — it tends to benefit when investors lean toward large-cap, defensive-growth names with durable cash generation.


What news and analysis moved the Linde conversation today

1) A fresh analyst reaffirmation landed today: Morgan Stanley stays constructive

One of the most notable “today” items for Linde wasn’t a press release — it was sell-side positioning.

TipRanks’ analyst feed shows Morgan Stanley reiterating an Overweight stance with a $495 price target on 12/23/25, while also noting a small upward adjustment to an EPS estimate for a subsequent period (17.92 vs. 17.80). [7]

Why it matters into tomorrow’s open:
A reiterated bullish rating on a mega-cap industrial gases leader can help underpin sentiment in a thin session — even if it doesn’t create an immediate catalyst. At Tuesday’s close around $425, a $495 target implies roughly 16% upside (directional, not a promise).

2) Institutional filing headlines hit today (but reflect Q3 positioning)

Two separate filing-driven headlines circulated Tuesday focused on Q3 institutional activity:

  • Confluence Investment Management trimmed its stake by about 2.1% in Q3, per its Form 13F coverage. [8]
  • Yousif Capital Management reduced its stake by about 5.4% in Q3, also tied to 13F reporting. [9]

How to interpret these before tomorrow’s open:
These “today” headlines can look dramatic, but they’re backward-looking (Q3), and they typically don’t indicate a sudden change in fundamentals. They can, however, influence short-term narrative — especially during holiday weeks when the news flow is lighter.


Forecasts and targets: where analysts cluster on Linde right now

Different aggregators vary, but the direction of travel is consistent: analysts covering Linde generally remain constructive, with many targets sitting above the current price.

  • MarketBeat’s consensus snapshot referenced an average target price around $501 and a consensus “Buy” stance (as presented in the filing-driven coverage published today). [10]
  • TipRanks’ feed shows multiple “Buy/Outperform” style ratings and targets commonly in the high-$400s to low-$500s, including today’s Morgan Stanley $495 reiteration. [11]

What this means going into Dec. 24:
In a holiday-shortened session, “forecast dispersion” (big differences in targets) can matter less than the consensus direction. Right now, the most widely circulated positioning still frames Linde as a high-quality, cash-returning industrial rather than a high-risk cyclical.


The fundamentals investors keep coming back to

Even if today’s tape was calm, the underlying drivers investors watch for Linde haven’t changed — and the company’s most recent guidance remains a key anchor.

From Linde’s Q3 2025 results release, the company highlighted:

  • Full-year 2025 adjusted EPS guidance:$16.35 to $16.45
  • Q4 2025 adjusted EPS expectation:$4.10 to $4.20
  • Full-year capex expectation:$5.0B to $5.5B
  • A referenced contractual sale-of-gas project backlog of $7.1B [12]

Why this still matters “before tomorrow’s open”:
On days without fresh corporate news, Linde often trades on:

  • confidence in pricing + productivity,
  • visibility from long-term contracts,
  • and the predictability of capital returns (dividends + buybacks).

On dividends specifically, Linde’s investor materials show 2025 quarterly dividends at $1.50 per share (with the most recent December payment already completed). [13]


The single biggest “tomorrow” factor: Christmas Eve early close and thin liquidity

If you only remember one practical detail before the opening bell on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025, make it this:

  • The NYSE markets will close early at 1:00 p.m. Eastern on Dec. 24, 2025 (with certain options sessions closing later as specified by the exchange). [14]
  • Nasdaq’s official holiday schedule also lists an early close at 1:00 p.m. on Dec. 24, 2025. [15]
  • SIFMA’s recommendations indicate the U.S. bond market is expected to have an early close at 2:00 p.m. Eastern on Dec. 24, 2025. [16]

What early-close sessions can mean for LIN specifically

Holiday sessions often bring:

  • Lower trading volume
  • Wider bid/ask spreads
  • More price impact from single large orders
  • Potentially sharper moves in the final hour as desks square risk before the break

For a mega-cap like Linde, this usually doesn’t create chaos — but it can create odd prints and less reliable intraday signals, especially if you’re watching technical levels.


What to watch before the market opens Dec. 24

Here’s a focused checklist tailored to Linde (LIN) for the next session:

1) Watch the early premarket tape — but don’t overread it

Because tomorrow is a short session, premarket price action can be thin and jumpy. Use it for direction, not certainty. (Tonight’s after-hours stability is a helpful baseline.) [17]

2) Keep an eye on “quality industrials” sentiment

Linde often trades in sympathy with large-cap industrial and materials names when the market is rotating toward:

  • stable margin profiles,
  • cash flow visibility,
  • and shareholder returns.

3) Track analyst-note amplification

Today’s Morgan Stanley reiteration is the kind of item that can get recirculated across terminals and feeds on a quiet day. [18]
If additional notes hit early Wednesday, they can matter more than usual because the news stream is lighter.

4) Know the next big catalyst on the calendar: earnings

Nasdaq’s earnings page lists Feb. 5, 2026 as the estimated earnings report date (algorithm-derived). [19]
TipRanks also references a similar early-February window for the next report. [20]

That’s not “tomorrow,” but it’s the next clear fundamental waypoint many investors model around.


Bottom line for LIN after the bell today

Linde stock closed Dec. 23 with a measured gain and showed no meaningful after-hours shock, which keeps the focus on two things heading into Dec. 24:

  1. Market structure: a holiday-shortened session with an early close and likely thinner liquidity. [21]
  2. Narrative support: constructive analyst posture (including today’s reiterated Overweight stance and $495 target from Morgan Stanley) and steady long-term guidance framing. [22]

If you want, tell me whether you want the article to lean more bullish, more balanced, or more risk-focused (e.g., Europe demand, FX, energy input costs), and I’ll rewrite it in that editorial tone while keeping it Google News–style.

References

1. www.linde.com, 2. www.marketwatch.com, 3. www.nyse.com, 4. stockanalysis.com, 5. www.marketwatch.com, 6. www.marketwatch.com, 7. www.tipranks.com, 8. www.marketbeat.com, 9. www.marketbeat.com, 10. www.marketbeat.com, 11. www.tipranks.com, 12. assets.linde.com, 13. www.linde.com, 14. www.nyse.com, 15. www.nasdaq.com, 16. www.sifma.org, 17. www.marketwatch.com, 18. www.tipranks.com, 19. www.nasdaq.com, 20. www.tipranks.com, 21. www.nyse.com, 22. www.tipranks.com

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