Compass Group PLC share price today: CPG ticks up after midweek drop, with dollar-trading switch back in focus
13 February 2026
1 min read

Compass Group PLC share price today: CPG ticks up after midweek drop, with dollar-trading switch back in focus

London, Feb 13, 2026, 08:59 GMT — Regular session on tap.

  • Compass Group gained roughly 0.4% shortly after the London open.
  • The stock dropped 2.7% Wednesday, adding to a turbulent stretch this month.
  • Investors eye an April move to dollar-based trading, plus a dividend payout expected later this month.

Compass Group ticked up 0.4% to 2,051 pence by 0845 GMT on Friday, clawing back a sliver of this week’s losses as activity returned in London. 1

The bounce stands out mostly because fresh catalysts have been scarce; the contract caterer has dropped in recent sessions and now sits close to the lower end of its latest range. A busier calendar later in the quarter has investors watching for some support before a change in the way the shares are quoted.

Compass shares slipped 2.7% Wednesday, settling at 20.46 pounds, while the FTSE 100 turned in a stronger performance, according to MarketWatch data. The stock wrapped up the session roughly 28% off its 52-week peak of 28.53 pounds. 2

Compass put out its latest update last week. Organic revenue growth, which excludes effects from currency fluctuations and acquisitions, came in at 7.3% for the first quarter. Client retention stayed north of 96%. The company stuck with its outlook, still calling for roughly 10% growth in underlying operating profit on a constant-currency basis—meaning it’s holding exchange rates flat. CEO Dominic Blakemore described it as “a strong start to the year with broad based growth across every region and sector.”

Investors are also paying close attention to Compass’s currency plans in London. The company confirmed it will shift its trading line from sterling to U.S. dollars starting April 1. The nominal share value stays in pounds, voting rights remain as is, and dividends continue in pounds unless shareholders choose a different currency. 3

Key dates are coming up fast. Compass has its dividend set to go out on Feb. 26, and it’s planning to release half-year results on May 11. 4

Traders are weighing whether the currency switch fizzles out as a non-event or stirs up noise on the tape — a particular concern for retail investors who still count in pence. Signs of shaky liquidity, fatter spreads, or awkward conversions would likely do sentiment no favors, given the stock’s weakness.

Still, there’s a risk to watch for. Should demand soften or pricing strength slip as inflation ebbs, the “steady compounder” story can start to unravel fast—and with little share price momentum in reserve, that leaves the stock exposed.

Execution’s next. Investors are eyeing the April 1 switch to dollar trading—any hiccups there will get noticed. After that, focus moves to the May half-year numbers, where growth and margins face a closer inspection.

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