London, February 2, 2026, 08:49 GMT — Regular session
- Experian shares edged up roughly 0.3% to 2,766p in early London trading
- Company revealed its initial buyback, snapping up 224,000 shares at an average price of 2,763.6p
- Investors balance the boost from buybacks against a cautious market mood and an approaching dividend record date
Experian (EXPN.L) shares nudged up roughly 0.3% to 2,766 pence by 0849 GMT on Monday, gaining 8 pence from their last close. Despite the rise, the stock remains close to the bottom of its 52-week range. (Google)
The credit data group reported buying 224,000 shares on Jan. 30 at a weighted average price of 2,763.5664 pence, with individual purchases ranging from 2,736 to 2,800 pence. These shares will be held in treasury — meaning they won’t be canceled but kept on the company’s books — bringing treasury stock to 56,459,651 shares, the company said. (Investegate)
This is significant now as the buyback shifts from pledge to execution. It’s one of the rare tools a company can deploy swiftly when sentiment wavers and investors seek reassurance beneath the stock’s price.
European shares edged lower in early trading, weighed down by commodity-linked stocks following a steep decline in energy and metal prices, Reuters reported. (Reuters)
Experian kicked off a $1 billion share buyback last week, aiming to wrap it up by June 30, 2027. The company said it expects to finish the financial year with a “favourable leverage position.” The repurchase will both trim shares outstanding and meet around $200 million in employee share plan obligations, with the timing adjusting to market conditions. (Investegate)
Experian has been emphasizing its operational progress. CEO Brian Cassin highlighted “strong Q3 growth” and maintained the company’s full-year guidance, citing “new AI opportunities.” For the quarter ending Dec. 31, revenue rose 12% at actual exchange rates and 8% organically — which excludes currency fluctuations and acquisition impacts. (Experian)
The buyback doesn’t put to rest concerns over the credit cycle and regulation. Experian relies heavily on credit checks, mortgage inquiries, and fraud screening in North America—services tightly linked to interest-rate trends and lender demand. Reuters reported last month that the company has also seen weaker demand in some other regions. Analyst Andrew Ripper at Panmure Liberum pointed to several headwinds: a sluggish U.S. dollar, President Donald Trump’s proposal to cap credit card interest rates at 10%, and Fair Isaac’s decision to sell credit scores directly to mortgage lenders. (Reuters)
Rates and risk appetite continue to dominate market moves. Traders are focused on central bank meetings and U.S. payroll figures following a sharp metals sell-off and broader turmoil across risk assets, according to a Reuters global markets wrap. (Reuters)
Experian’s key upcoming dates are the first interim dividend on Feb. 6 and the full-year results due May 20. Investors will also watch closely for updates on share buybacks to gauge the pace of repurchases. (Experian)