Rightmove stock jumps 1.5% into the weekend — here’s what matters before Monday

Rightmove stock jumps 1.5% into the weekend — here’s what matters before Monday

London, Jan 11, 2026, 08:30 GMT — The market has closed.

  • Rightmove shares climbed 1.5% on Friday to close at 515.6 pence.
  • No new company updates have come since early January; attention now turns to UK data and key events slated for February.
  • With AI spending on the rise, investors are focused on inflation, interest rates, and Rightmove’s profit margins.

Rightmove (RMV.L) shares closed Friday 1.5% higher at 515.6 pence, recovering from an intraday low of 498.4 pence. Over the last 12 months, the stock has fluctuated between 474.5 pence and 827.0 pence, per market data. 1

London markets were closed on Sunday, pushing traders to focus on upcoming events, with Rightmove’s full-year results set for Feb. 27 taking center stage. 2

Rightmove hasn’t issued any fresh regulatory updates since its Jan. 2 report on total voting rights, so the stock’s direction is largely driven by market positioning and broader macro trends. 3

Rightmove generates the bulk of its revenue by charging estate agents and homebuilders to list properties on its site. Investors often zero in on membership numbers and ARPA — average revenue per advertiser — to gauge the company’s pricing strength. 4

The company warned back in November that increased spending—largely on artificial intelligence—would drag profit growth in 2026, despite aiming for 8%-10% revenue growth. 5

RBC’s Anthony Codling weighed in at the time, calling the underlying business “solid” and warning the market might be overreacting to the initial news, despite management flagging margin pressure from the buildout. 6

The housing market remains patchy. Savills pointed to Nationwide’s figures, which showed a 0.4% drop in house prices in December. The north saw firmer activity, while some parts of the south lagged behind. 7

The next UK data set likely to shift rate expectations—and with it, housing sentiment—arrives on Jan. 21. That’s when the Office for National Statistics will release December inflation figures along with its “private rent and house prices” report. 8

Rightmove’s outlook hinges on rate expectations since mortgage expenses directly influence buyer demand and sales activity. The Bank of England will make its initial policy call for 2026 on Feb. 5. 9

Still, a slower pace for rate cuts remains on the table. The UK parliament’s Commons Library pointed out that the next MPC meeting is set for Feb. 5 and highlighted the string of cuts expected from 2024 onward — a prompt that policy bets can quickly change if inflation refuses to ease. 10

Rightmove’s results on Feb. 27 will be the next major catalyst. Investors will focus on shifts in advertiser numbers, ARPA trends, and the pace at which increased tech spending impacts earnings.

Stock Market Today

Caterpillar stock price jumps 7% to $726 as Dow cracks 50,000 — what matters next week

Caterpillar stock price jumps 7% to $726 as Dow cracks 50,000 — what matters next week

7 February 2026
Caterpillar shares surged 7.1% to $726.20 Friday, driving the Dow above 50,000 for the first time. The move erased recent losses and followed insider selling by Group President Bob De Lange earlier in the week. Deere and CNH Industrial also gained as investors rotated into industrial stocks. Markets await next week’s U.S. jobs and inflation data.
Amazon stock slides as $200B AI spending plan meets cautious profit outlook

Amazon stock slides as $200B AI spending plan meets cautious profit outlook

7 February 2026
Amazon shares fell 9% Friday after the company announced plans for $200 billion in 2026 capital spending, mainly for AWS and AI, and issued a first-quarter profit outlook below estimates. The stock drop could erase $200 billion in market value. Fourth-quarter net sales rose 14% to $213.4 billion, while free cash flow declined due to higher spending on AI infrastructure.
Blockchain’s New Pitch: Tracking Supply-Chain Emissions for a Price

Blockchain’s New Pitch: Tracking Supply-Chain Emissions for a Price

7 February 2026
Blockchain industry groups are promoting supply-chain emissions tracking and data transparency, not crypto trading, as key business uses. Companies face mounting pressure to map Scope 3 emissions, which are often hard to verify. Past blockchain supply-chain projects, including Maersk’s TradeLens, struggled with adoption when partners failed to participate.
Reckitt (RKT.L) stock near 52-week high after buyback filing as £1.6bn special dividend vote nears
Previous Story

Reckitt (RKT.L) stock near 52-week high after buyback filing as £1.6bn special dividend vote nears

BP stock jumps on oil surge and buyback update — what to watch next
Next Story

BP stock jumps on oil surge and buyback update — what to watch next

Go toTop