London, Feb 4, 2026, 08:12 GMT — Regular session
- Experian shares climbed roughly 0.5% early Wednesday, bouncing back from Tuesday’s steep decline
- Company announced new share repurchases as part of its latest buyback programme
- Investors remain alert to the risk that new AI tools could disrupt pricing models in data-intensive sectors
Experian shares ticked up roughly 0.5% to 2,569 pence early Wednesday in London, following a close at 2,555 pence on Tuesday. The stock has fluctuated between 2,526 and 2,584 pence so far, holding close to the low end of its 52-week range. (Google)
The rebound follows a sector-wide selloff triggered by new automation tools from AI developer Anthropic. The company rolled out plug-ins—add-ons enabling its Claude Cowork agent to perform tasks inside other software—which traders say rekindled fears that AI might disrupt data and professional-services firms previously seen as AI winners. “Sometimes the market just shoots first and asks questions later,” said Mike Archibald, a portfolio manager at AGF Investments. (Reuters)
For Experian, the focus has shifted from this week’s headlines to what comes next: will AI boost demand for identity, fraud, and credit data, or will automation reduce the value of those datasets? The stock reflects that uncertainty, trading as if the outcome is still up in the air.
Experian reported buying 399,778 ordinary shares on Tuesday, paying a weighted average price of 2,537.7622 pence. The purchase prices varied between 2,462 pence and 2,728 pence. Since kicking off the programme, the firm has acquired 847,778 shares in total. The total shares outstanding, excluding treasury shares, now amount to 916,741,114. (Investegate)
Shares plunged 6.75% on Tuesday, with volume hitting 7.2 million—over twice the 50-day average of 3.2 million, according to MarketWatch data. (MarketWatch)
Experian revealed a $1 billion share buyback plan on Jan. 30, confirming that its medium-term financial targets, capital allocation strategy, and dividend policy remain steady. (Reuters)
But buybacks won’t hold the line if the market starts to question the value of the business model. Should investors decide that AI tools undercut “per-user” pricing or challenge long-term growth forecasts, the sell-off could spread beyond legal and analytics stocks to other data-driven sectors.
Investors are set to focus on a first interim dividend payment scheduled for Feb. 6, followed by the company’s preliminary full-year results on May 20. These updates will shed light on management’s outlook for demand, pricing, and their strategy for integrating AI into the business. (Experian)