London, Jan 28, 2026, 07:51 GMT — Premarket
- LSEG shares ended Tuesday at 8,258p, down 3.7%, while the FTSE 100 rose 0.6%.
- FTSE Russell is consulting on cutting the minimum free-float bar for non-UK incorporated London listings in its UK index series.
- LSEG disclosed another day of share repurchases under its buyback programme.
London Stock Exchange Group plc (LSEG.L) is in focus ahead of the London open after its FTSE Russell unit floated a change to UK index entry rules for overseas companies. The group also disclosed fresh buyback activity as the stock hovers near its 52-week low.
The consultation lands as Britain pushes to revive an IPO market that has thinned out, and as regulators hunt for small rule changes that might make London easier to pick. For LSEG, which owns FTSE Russell, index eligibility matters because benchmark membership can steer passive fund flows and trading volumes.
Free float — the shares available for public trading — is one of those tests, and FTSE thresholds feed into whether stocks are considered investable for major indices. Investors are also watching the U.S. Federal Reserve’s policy decision due later on Wednesday, a key driver for global risk appetite. (Federal Reserve)
LSEG shares closed on Tuesday at 8,258 pence, down 3.73% on the day, even as the FTSE 100 ended up 0.58%. The stock is about 32% below its 52-week high of 12,185 pence, according to Hargreaves Lansdown data. (Hargreaves Lansdown)
In a regulatory statement on Wednesday, LSEG said it bought 198,171 shares on Tuesday at an average 8,525.76 pence each, as part of a buyback programme it announced in November. The repurchased shares will be cancelled and the company said total voting rights would stand at 508,184,912 after the cancellation. (TradingView)
FTSE Russell’s consultation proposes lowering the minimum free-float threshold for non-UK incorporated companies in the FTSE UK Index Series to 10% from 25%, aligning the bar with UK-incorporated companies. The paper said the change would not affect the current index line-up because no non-UK incorporated companies are currently excluded for failing the 25% test, though the longer-term impact depends on whether eligible companies list in London. (LSEG)
London’s market has been searching for ways to stop a drift of listings to mainland Europe, the United States and Hong Kong, and LSEG said the split treatment on free-float is unique inside the wider FTSE Russell product range. The UK government has also been leaning on regulators to support growth, and new rules took effect this month scrapping the need for a prospectus for most capital raises. (Reuters)
Charles Hunt, head of research at broker Peel Hunt, welcomed the move, saying: “Anything that makes London more competitive and attractive to international businesses is a positive.” (Financial Times)
But a lower threshold is not a pipeline. Any pay-off for LSEG depends on whether overseas groups actually pick London and on whether the market gives them enough liquidity once they are here.
Investors will get another read on LSEG’s outlook with preliminary results for the year ended Dec. 31 due on Feb. 26, according to its financial calendar. (LSEG)