London, Feb 1, 2026, 09:24 GMT — Markets have closed.
- On Jan. 30, shares ended slightly lower, down 0.23% to 265.1p.
- The company intends to redeem the outstanding £12.7 million on a subordinated note line come Feb. 2.
- Traders eye the Bank of England’s rate decision on Feb. 5, followed by Legal & General’s full-year results due March 11.
Legal & General Group Plc shares ended Friday down 0.23%, closing at 265.10 pence. During the session, prices fluctuated between 263.60p and 266.20p, per market data. UK markets remain closed Sunday and will reopen Monday. (Investing)
The life insurer and asset manager operates in a market segment heavily influenced by rate expectations. It puts substantial money into bonds and offers retirement products, whose profitability can swing with yield fluctuations.
The spotlight now shifts to the Bank of England, set to reveal its next Bank Rate on Feb. 5. The current rate stands at 3.75%. Traders keep an eye on gilts — UK government bonds — since their yields influence pricing across many UK financial assets. (Bank of England)
The UK’s FTSE 100 closed Friday 0.5% higher, marking its seventh consecutive month of gains. The index got a lift from a softer pound and robust bank shares. “The weaker pound is obviously beneficial for the multinationals,” said Fiona Cincotta, senior market analyst at City Index. (Reuters)
Legal & General is set to redeem the last £12,705,000 of its Fixed Rate Reset Subordinated Notes due 2064 on Feb. 2, according to a company notice. These subordinated notes rank below senior debt, and this move will clear out all outstanding notes. (Investegate)
The next key date to watch is earnings. According to the group’s financial calendar, a preliminary full-year results announcement is set for March 11 at 07:00 GMT. On that same page, shares closed at 265.1p on January 30. (Legal & General Group)
UK life insurers like Aviva and Phoenix Group frequently move in step with interest rate trends as much as with their own news. This dynamic works both ways: rising yields help boost pricing on new annuities, but sharp swings can rattle the market value of their investment portfolios.
Traders will watch gilt yields and sterling closely this week, alongside shifts in global risk appetite. UK financials often react sharply when the market recalibrates its expectations around interest rates.
The risk is clear. Should the BoE push for deeper rate cuts than anticipated, insurer stocks could take a hit as their future investment income gets marked down. On top of that, a wider market stumble might put pressure on asset management fees.
As the market winds down for the weekend, all eyes shift to Monday’s open. Then comes the BoE decision on Feb. 5. Legal & General will focus on its full-year update due March 11.