London, Jan 24, 2026, 09:47 GMT — Market closed
- Sage shares ended Friday at 1,029.1 pence, gaining 0.6%
- Sage formed a global AI partnership with Augusta Labs to accelerate product launches
- Over the last two sessions, the company continued its stock buyback under a programme set to run through March
Sage Group plc shares closed Friday 0.6% higher at 1,029.1 pence, following news of an AI partnership and ongoing share buybacks from the UK accounting and payroll software firm. During the session, the stock fluctuated between 1,013.5 and 1,034.0 pence, still hovering about 24% below its 52-week peak. (Google)
Timing is everything. Sage is pushing AI features aggressively right as investors shift focus from flashy demos to what actually drives revenue. In subscription models like Sage’s, that question comes up fast.
Sage is set to release its Q1 FY26 trading update on Tuesday, Jan. 27 at 08:30 a.m. GMT. Investors will be watching closely for steady subscription growth and any changes in pricing or demand, especially as smaller businesses reconsider their budgets. (Sage)
On Thursday, Sage revealed a global deal with Lisbon-based Augusta Labs to embed applied AI engineering teams within its product organisation, aiming to expand its AI Centre of Excellence. “This partnership gives Sage the start-up speed we need,” said Manav Thiara, senior vice president at Sage. Augusta Labs co-founder Rodrigo Fernandes described AI as “entering its execution era.” The announcement highlighted projects across Sage Payroll, Sage Active, and Sage 300, including “agentic workflows” — AI tools designed to handle tasks end-to-end — plus faster data pipelines for real-time insights. (Sage)
Sage revealed further buyback activity on Friday, acquiring 541,775 shares at a volume-weighted average price of 1,025.67 pence — a calculation that factors in trade size — with individual share prices ranging from 1,014.5 to 1,032.5 pence. These shares will be cancelled. The company confirmed the buyback programme is set to conclude by March 19 at the latest. (Investegate)
Just one day before, Sage revealed it snapped up 1,287,227 shares at a volume-weighted average price of 1,021.61 pence. In total, across two sessions, that’s around 1.83 million shares — equating to about £18.7 million at those average prices. It’s consistent activity, but nothing that shouts a major move. (Investegate)
The buyback traces back to November, when Sage unveiled a plan to repurchase up to 300 million pounds alongside full-year results revealing an increase in underlying operating profit. At the time, Chief Executive Steve Hare noted that customers using its AI-driven Copilot reported it was “saving them 10-12 hours a week” of administrative work. (Reuters)
Sage goes head-to-head with accounting software giants like Intuit and Xero, where adding automation to core workflows is the sector’s standard play. The key challenge for Sage now: can new partnerships and increased engineering muscle speed up product rollouts enough to win paying customers — all without sacrificing tight cost management?
But there’s a catch. Small and mid-sized firms often hit the brakes on upgrades when hiring stalls or budgets tighten, and investing in AI can push costs up before revenue catches up. If the Jan. 27 update signals softer demand or bigger spending, the buyback might not be enough to buoy sentiment.
Next week, investors will focus on subscription momentum, pricing trends, and any remarks on AI feature adoption. They’ll also track how aggressively Sage keeps returning cash via buybacks. The upcoming trigger: the Q1 FY26 trading update, set for Tuesday, Jan. 27.