London, Feb 17, 2026, 08:47 GMT — Regular session
- LSEG inched up roughly 0.4% to 7,646p early on, hovering close to the session’s high.
- Eyes are now on LSEG, which is set to release its preliminary results on Feb 26.
- This week’s UK inflation and retail sales figures are set to influence rate-cut expectations as well as drive movement in London stocks.
Shares of London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG.L) edged up 0.4% to 7,646 pence as of 0839 GMT Tuesday, following a Monday close at 7,612 pence. During the morning session, trading ranged between 7,578 and 7,658 pence. The group’s market value sits near 38.3 billion pounds. Still, the stock remains far from its 52-week peak of 11,915 pence. (Google)
FTSE 100 ticked higher at the open, lifting some of the big financials. By 0811 GMT, the blue-chip index had gained 0.33%, sitting at 10,507.97, Investors Chronicle figures showed. (Investors Chronicle)
LSEG is up next with its preliminary full-year results for the period ended Dec. 31, landing Feb. 26. Also on the calendar: a Q1 trading update focused on revenue, plus the annual general meeting, both set for April 23. (LSEG)
European companies have been turning in decent earnings, but that hasn’t been enough to spark a broad rally—investors have zeroed in on guidance and where valuations sit. “Overall, EPS (earnings per share) recovery is on track, especially in Europe,” Barclays European equity strategist Magesh Kumar Chandrasekaran said. But with current valuations, “a bit more nervousness around earnings” tends to creep in, Deutsche Bank’s Carolin Raab added. (Reuters)
Macro data has the potential to rattle or reassure. Investors are watching UK January inflation and retail sales figures this week; money markets, according to Reuters on Monday, are currently betting on a 25-basis-point rate cut next month — that’s a quarter point. (Reuters)
With LSEG, investors usually zero in on the recurring revenue—data and analytics keep that engine running. They’re also watching trading and clearing volumes, tracking any changes as risk appetites move around.
Comparisons don’t do LSEG many favors—and they’re hardly straightforward. Most traders put it next to Deutsche Börse or Euronext, then go back and forth on the familiar metrics: index licensing, clearing profit margins, the stickiness of those data subscriptions.
But it swings both directions. If guidance for 2026 turns cautious, or volumes slip in a jittery market, shares can fall quickly. A stronger inflation print? That can delay rate-cut hopes, leaving valuations under strain.