Today: 19 May 2026
Linde stock ends Friday higher; $36 million planned share sale and two investor events in focus
15 February 2026
2 mins read

Linde stock ends Friday higher; $36 million planned share sale and two investor events in focus

New York, February 15, 2026, 14:15 EST — The market is closed.

  • Linde finished Friday at $481, marking a 1.7% gain over its previous close
  • A filing showed plans to unload 75,607 shares—roughly $36.1 million based on the stated value.
  • U.S. markets will be closed Monday. Linde execs, meanwhile, are set to appear at Citi and Barclays events on Feb. 17 and 18.

Linde plc finished Friday at $481, up 1.7%. Investors heading into the holiday-shortened week are waiting for new cues on demand, pricing, and capital returns.

With U.S. equity markets shuttered Monday for Presidents Day, the trading calendar shortens and activity resumes Tuesday. For heavily traded stocks such as Linde, this gap means weekend developments might hit lighter order books in the first session back.

A Form 144 filed Friday indicates a holder intends to offload 75,607 Linde shares—worth roughly $36.1 million at the stated market price—via Fidelity Brokerage Services on Nasdaq. According to the document, the stock originated from options granted back in 2017 and 2018, which were exercised for cash on Feb. 13. No share sales were reported in the last three months.

Linde often signals trends in industrial output, given its role providing oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen to the chemicals, manufacturing, and steel industries. The stock tends to move with changes in factory activity, regardless of whether there’s much company news to go on.

Linde’s last major update landed earlier this month: the company projected 2026 adjusted EPS growth between 5% and 8%, stripping out currency shifts, and set its adjusted earnings per share outlook at $17.40 to $17.90. CEO Sanjiv Lamba described 2025’s results as “resilient performance,” adding that Linde remains “well positioned” to generate value even as “macroeconomic uncertainties” linger. Linde

Chief Financial Officer Matt White told analysts on the earnings call that Linde ramped up share buybacks to $1.4 billion in the fourth quarter, taking advantage of what he called an “attractive window” after shares fell. White also pointed out that Linde’s 2026 outlook — specifically, the midpoint — does not factor in any base volume growth, underscoring that the company isn’t counting on an economic boost. Linde

On Friday, peers headed lower. Air Products & Chemicals dropped 4.2% in the previous session, a sharp move that highlights just how abruptly sentiment can turn in the industrial-gases sector—even when there’s little company-specific news in play.

Bulls face a key risk: the company’s guidance relies on a “no economic improvement” scenario that might actually be too hopeful. Should industrial activity lose more steam, expect volume drops and a real fight to hold onto pricing power. Currency swings could keep muddying reported numbers, too. Linde

The next clear catalyst on the calendar: Linde CEO White and IR head Juan Pelaez are set to appear at Citi’s Global Industrial Tech and Mobility Conference on Feb. 17, then at Barclays’ Industrial Select Conference the following day, Feb. 18. Market desks will be watching for any fresh details on 2026 volume guidance, updates around project backlog conversion, capex plans, and how fast buybacks are running.

Investors are likely to keep an eye on any further disclosures related to the proposed sale, especially if those details confirm whether deals actually go through, once trading picks up again Tuesday after markets were closed Monday.

Stock Market Today

  • Indian Investors Prop Up Markets as Foreign Funds Exit Amid Global Uncertainty
    May 19, 2026, 8:03 AM EDT. The managing director of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), Sundararaman Ramamurthy, attributed the avoidance of a market 'freefall' in India to strong domestic investor participation. Despite the BSE Sensex falling 11% year-to-date and being one of Asia's worst performers, Indian investors pumped a net $91 billion into equities last year, offsetting a $35 billion withdrawal by foreign investors. The reversal in foreign versus domestic holdings reflects cautious foreign sentiment, dampened by weak earnings, rising oil prices linked to Middle East conflict, and India's lack of major AI companies compared with other Asian markets. Domestic equity mutual fund inflows surged 58% in April to nearly $4 billion, signaling robust local confidence amid global challenges.

Latest articles

MetaVia Stock Moves Ahead of the Open After Obesity-Drug Data Picked for ADA

MetaVia Stock Moves Ahead of the Open After Obesity-Drug Data Picked for ADA

19 May 2026
Diploma PLC shares rose 4.75% to 6,940p after the company raised its 2026 outlook, citing strong demand and a 17% rise in first-half revenue to £851.1 million. Adjusted operating profit climbed 33% to £208.9 million, and the interim dividend increased 5% to 19.1p. The Controls division posted 26% organic growth. Diploma completed 15 acquisitions worth about £310 million in the past year.
Zeta Global Pops Again as Traders Eye OpenAI Ad Deal

Zeta Global Pops Again as Traders Eye OpenAI Ad Deal

19 May 2026
Zeta Global shares rose 3.4% to $19.85 in premarket trading Tuesday after CEO David Steinberg announced an advertising agreement with OpenAI at a JPMorgan conference. The stock had closed up 11.6% at $19.19 on Monday, trading over 17 million shares. Bank of America reinstated coverage with a Buy rating and $24 target. Zeta recently reported first-quarter revenue up 50% year-over-year to $396 million.
Home Depot Earnings Show Housing Stress for Wall Street

Home Depot Earnings Show Housing Stress for Wall Street

19 May 2026
Home Depot reported first-quarter sales of $41.8 billion, up 4.8%, beating estimates, but comparable sales rose just 0.6%, missing analyst forecasts. Net earnings fell to $3.3 billion from $3.4 billion a year earlier. The company kept its 2026 outlook unchanged. Shares edged higher in premarket trading.

Popular

Dominion Energy Shares Move After NextEra’s $67 Billion Plan Seen as AI Power Play

Dominion Energy Shares Move After NextEra’s $67 Billion Plan Seen as AI Power Play

19 May 2026
NextEra Energy agreed to acquire Dominion Energy in a $66.8 billion all-stock deal, sending Dominion shares up 9.4% to $67.56 while NextEra fell 4.6%. Dominion holders would get 0.8138 NextEra share per Dominion share and a $360 million cash payment. The deal requires multiple regulatory approvals. Dominion’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project remains a focus after cutting costs to $11.4 billion.
Procter & Gamble stock price: PG shares slip as Italy ad probe and insider sale set up a key week
Previous Story

Procter & Gamble stock price: PG shares slip as Italy ad probe and insider sale set up a key week

Micron stock price in focus as India start-up timeline lands on a US market holiday
Next Story

Micron stock price in focus as India start-up timeline lands on a US market holiday

Go toTop