London, Jan 17, 2026, 09:05 GMT — Market closed.
Experian (EXPN) shares ended Friday down 1.02%, closing at 3,296 pence. The dip came as the credit data company announced the exchange rate for its first interim dividend ahead of the weekend. (MarketScreener)
The next big moment for the stock is coming up soon. Experian plans to report third-quarter trading for FY26 on Jan. 21. Back in November, CEO Brian Cassin told investors to expect full-year total revenue growth around 11% and organic growth near 8% — “at the top end” of its earlier forecast. (FT Markets)
The dividend update highlights just how much the shareholder return hinges on the dollar-sterling exchange rate. Experian confirmed the £1=$1.33804 rate for converting the 21.25 U.S. cent interim dividend for those shareholders who didn’t opt for dollars, which works out to roughly 15.8814 pence per share. They also reiterated that some dividends could be subject to Irish withholding tax if exemption paperwork isn’t in order. (Sharecast)
The FTSE 100 edged down 0.04% on Friday, closing at 10,235.29. Mining shares weighed on the index amid fresh concerns over copper demand. Meanwhile, defence stocks gained ground as tensions between Russia and Ukraine flared up again, according to a Reuters report. (Reuters)
Experian filed a routine block listing on Friday detailing the six-month return for employee share schemes. This tracks shares issued under staff plans and serves as a housekeeping disclosure, not a market mover. The company reported issuing 81,305 shares under its UK tax-qualified Sharesave plan during the period, with 752,307 remaining unallotted. (Investegate)
On Jan. 21, investors will get a direct read on credit markets. Experian holds a trove of lending and fraud data, so shifts in credit check requests, identity verification, and analytics often reveal banks and lenders pulling back before broader signs emerge.
Equifax and TransUnion, peers in the space, usually track similar themes: loan growth, mortgage trends, and whether lenders ramp up fraud prevention or tighten vendor spending. When sentiment turns positive, sector sympathy boosts them all; but if it sours, it can drag them down together.
The risk is clear. Should Experian signal weaker volumes in crucial markets or suggest pricing pressure, the stock could stumble, even if the dividend remains untouched — particularly as investors await firm confirmation on the November outlook.
The market reopens Monday, with eyes on Jan. 21—Experian’s date to release its Q3 trading update for FY26. (Experianplc)