London, Jan 8, 2026, 09:36 GMT — Regular session
- LSEG shares were up about 0.1% in early London trade
- The group disclosed another tranche of share repurchases under its buyback programme
- Next major catalyst is its preliminary results on Feb. 26
London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG.L) shares inched higher on Thursday after the company said it bought back 117,644 shares as part of its existing programme. The stock was up 0.1% at 8,898 pence. London South East
The small gain follows a sharper move the other way a day earlier, when LSEG fell 2.33% to close at 88.90 pounds, underperforming the broader market. Trading volume was also light versus its recent average, MarketWatch data showed. MarketWatch
Why this matters now: UK equities have been swinging between fresh highs and quick pullbacks, leaving exchange and market-data stocks in a bright light. The FTSE 100 hit a record close on Tuesday before slipping on Wednesday as losses in energy and financial stocks weighed, with investors also tracking headlines tied to U.S.-Venezuela developments. Reuters
LSEG has traded in a choppy band this morning, between 8,738 pence and 8,926 pence, and remains well below its 52-week high of 12,185 pence, according to LSE data. The group’s market value is about 45.3 billion pounds. London South East
In the filing, LSEG said the shares were bought on Jan. 7 at an average price of 8,941.89 pence and will be cancelled. Buybacks are meant to shrink the share count, which can lift earnings per share over time, though the effect depends on pace and price.
The next hard date on investors’ calendars is LSEG’s preliminary results for the year ended Dec. 31, due on Feb. 26. The update will be read for signs on demand for the group’s market data and analytics products and on activity in its trading and clearing businesses. LSEG
But there’s a risk case hanging over the exchange story. A Reuters Breakingviews column this week pointed to a steady drift of large European companies towards U.S. primary listings, a trend that could weigh on local listing pipelines and secondary-market turnover if it deepens. Reuters