Madrid, February 7, 2026, 23:07 CET — Market closed
- Inditex finished Friday’s session 0.78% higher, closing at 57.14 euros.
- A filing with the CNMV detailed plans for a buyback capped at 180 million euros, with purchases slated to kick off from Feb. 5.
- The next big event for investors lands March 11, when the company posts its full-year results.
Inditex shares finished Friday’s session at 57.14 euros, up 0.78% on the day. The stock wrapped before the Madrid market headed into the weekend. 1
Shares swung around this week, climbing as high as 58.14 euros on Thursday, only to close out the day at 56.70 euros. By the next session, the stock was back on its feet. 2
That’s suddenly relevant, with Zara’s parent still working through a buyback that stretches into March and the next earnings update near enough for traders to get positioned ahead of time. Now that the market’s shut, attention snaps to how much firepower that buyback might actually deliver for the tape once trading kicks back in on Monday — and where it’ll fall short.
The IBEX 35 jumped 1.11% on Friday, helping steady broader sentiment as the week wrapped up. 3
Inditex will repurchase as many as 3 million shares for a maximum of 180 million euros, according to a filing with Spain’s securities regulator (CNMV). The buyback is set to take place in two parts: first, up to 1.6 million shares between Feb. 5 and March 31, and then another 1.4 million between May 1 and June 30. The company is looking to cover share-award obligations for management and staff under its long-term incentive schemes, the filing said. BBVA has been tapped to handle the transactions.
A share buyback happens when a company goes into the market to purchase its own shares. Reducing the share count can help push up earnings per share. Still, this particular programme is described as a move to cover equity compensation, rather than signaling any broad intention to return cash to shareholders.
Macro factors remain active behind the scenes. The European Central Bank kept its benchmark rate steady at 2% on Thursday, with little guidance about future policy shifts. ECB President Christine Lagarde described inflation as “in a good place,” while UBS strategist Kiran Ganesh noted that euro strength was “not a new development” and already factored into forecasts. For Inditex, currency swings matter—a stronger euro cuts into overseas revenue and profit once it’s brought back home. 4
Next session, eyes will be on whether the buyback steps in as support when shares dip, as well as if the stock pushes back toward that 58-euro ceiling from Thursday. Updates from CNMV on repurchases could also catch notice, especially with fewer headlines competing for attention.
But here’s the risk: with a small buyback mostly covering staff awards, there’s not much of a buffer if risk sentiment sours, or if the market starts bracing for tougher times for shoppers. Fast-fashion stocks aren’t immune—heavy discounting or shaky margins can still land a blow.
Inditex plans to report its full-year FY2025 numbers—covering February 1 through January 31—on March 11. That date stands out as the next key event for the stock. 5