London, February 4, 2026, 08:16 (GMT) — Regular session
- Rolls-Royce shares nudged up in early London trading following an updated buyback announcement
- The company announced another daily buy as part of its £200 million programme
- Talks out of Singapore about engine pricing and durability remain a key focus for investors
Shares of Rolls-Royce Holdings plc ticked up on Wednesday following news of another tranche of share buybacks. By 0816 GMT, the stock climbed 6.5 pence, or 0.5%, to 1,242 pence, after peaking at 1,250.5 pence earlier in the session. (Investing)
Buyback notices keep coming in steadily, offering a straightforward gauge of daily market mood: is the company still handing back cash, and how fast? For stocks where execution doubts linger, even routine filings catch investors’ attention.
Airlines are pushing back on engine repair costs and lengthy maintenance delays, sparking a debate that hits at the heart of the business’s profit engine — aftermarket service.
Rolls-Royce disclosed in a regulatory filing that it purchased 270,818 ordinary shares on Feb. 3. The trades took place on the London Stock Exchange, CBOE BXE, CBOE CXE, and Aquis, executed via UBS AG London Branch. The volume-weighted average price was roughly 1,243.95 pence per share. The company plans to cancel all the repurchased shares. (Investegate)
Rolls-Royce ended Tuesday’s session at 1,235.5 pence, gaining 5 pence, or 0.41%, per market data. (MarketWatch)
At Tuesday’s Singapore Airshow, civil-aerospace head Rob Watson pushed back against airline complaints that engine makers are cashing in on supply-chain woes. “Our pricing reflects supply chain disruption coming out of COVID,” Watson told Reuters, adding that “pricing has to some extent been a function of cost.” He noted Rolls-Royce remains “on track” with durability improvements on its largest engine for the Airbus A350-1000, highlighting a 60% increase in “time on wing”—the interval between major engine overhauls—with more gains projected from 2028. (Reuters)
For investors, the takeaway is clear: long-haul engines generate returns through years of service contracts, parts sales, and shop visits. That’s where the profit lies—and where pricing debates often get heated.
But it works both ways. If durability goals falter or clients push harder on repair costs, service margins could tighten fast, making cash flow projections tougher to justify.
Traders are keeping an eye on Airbus and its discussions about a bigger A350 model. This could trigger new engine development and increase spending, even as suppliers aim to maintain steady production. No decisions have been made yet, but the mere talk is enough to shift expectations.
Rolls-Royce is slated to release its full-year results for 2025 on Feb. 26, followed by a UK investor roadshow on March 2, according to the company’s schedule. (Rolls Royce)