CRH stock price slips after buyback update, with earnings next week in focus
11 February 2026
1 min read

CRH stock price slips after buyback update, with earnings next week in focus

New York, Feb 11, 2026, 16:14 EST — After-hours

  • CRH closed at $127.75 in New York, slipping roughly 1.1% on the day.
  • The company said it repurchased 28,900 shares on Feb. 10, paying an average of $127.72 each.
  • CRH’s quarterly numbers and its 2026 outlook are on deck next week, drawing investor attention.

CRH plc shares slipped roughly 1.1% Wednesday, settling at $127.75 after ranging from $129.87 down to $127.25. The Dublin-headquartered building materials group disclosed it repurchased 28,900 shares on Feb. 10, paying an average $127.7217 apiece—just a slice of its up-to-$300 million buyback set to wrap up by Feb. 17. 1

This disclosure is coming into focus as the buyback program nears its endgame, with investors looking for clues on how forceful CRH will be with cash returns before its next results. Shares have hovered close to recent highs; even slight shifts in management’s language on demand or pricing tend to sway the stock.

Rate expectations moved back into focus. U.S. equities barely budged Wednesday, as a hotter-than-forecast January jobs number prompted traders to dial down hopes for imminent Fed rate cuts. “This is constructive news in that the economy is not in dire need of rate cuts,” said Julia Hermann, global market strategist at New York Life Investments. 2

CRH disclosed it repurchased 29,100 shares on Feb. 9, paying an average of $126.8005 apiece. The buyback prices stretched from $126.20 up to $127.53, per a separate UK regulatory filing. 3

When a company buys back its own shares, the result is a reduced share count, which can push up per-share metrics as time goes on. According to CRH’s filings, any shares repurchased are cancelled. As for treasury shares, these remain on the balance sheet but don’t come with voting rights.

Traders now eye CRH’s results, watching to see if the spotlight stays on pricing power and volumes inside its U.S.-skewed business—or if management signals a cooler view on private construction demand. Cash generation and capital allocation figures will also get heavy scrutiny.

Steady infrastructure jobs in North America have underpinned the company’s performance lately. Still, investors are pressing for details on its 2026 outlook—covering residential, non-residential, and public sector projects.

Still, buybacks don’t guarantee support. Should rising borrowing costs start to weigh more on construction, or if management signals weaker volumes or pricing pressure, shares may slide—even as repurchases continue in the background.

CRH will release its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results after the close of U.S. trading on Feb. 18, with an earnings call set for 8:00 a.m. EST the next day. 4

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