Aristocrat Leisure share price rises after buyback update flags A$1.5 billion cap
25 February 2026
1 min read

Aristocrat Leisure share price rises after buyback update flags A$1.5 billion cap

Sydney, Feb 25, 2026, 18:12 AEDT — The market is closed.

  • Aristocrat Leisure finished the session 1.7% higher at A$46.81.
  • A daily filing revealed A$18.4 million went toward buybacks the previous day.
  • The buyback program has been extended through March 5, 2027, capping total repurchases at A$1.5 billion.

Shares in Aristocrat Leisure Ltd climbed Wednesday, with the gaming supplier reporting further buyback activity and sticking to both the total size and scheduled finish of its on-market repurchase program. (MarketScreener)

This update lands as Aristocrat’s stock remains under strain, with the company still relying on buybacks to reduce its float and keep per-share numbers looking better. Shares have dropped roughly 37% over the past year, even factoring in Wednesday’s bump. (MarketScreener)

Aristocrat snapped up 399,028 of its own shares on Tuesday, spending A$18.4 million, a filing showed. The stock changed hands between A$46.01 and A$47.07 per share. Since launching the buyback, Aristocrat has now repurchased 14,430,717 shares, totaling roughly A$898.6 million. According to the notice, the program runs through March 5, 2027, with a ceiling of A$1.5 billion. Barrenjoey Markets is broking the deal. (Company Announcements)

Aristocrat advanced as Australian shares surged, the ASX 200 closing at a fresh high of 9,128.3, a gain of 1.18%. (Market Index)

Investors kept their eyes on inflation figures. Headline inflation for January landed at 3.8% year-on-year. HSBC chief economist Paul Bloxham highlighted the “still-strong underlying inflation” showing up in the trimmed mean — the measure that cuts out outliers to capture the underlying movement. (ABC News)

Aristocrat’s buyback keeps a consistent bid under the stock, though it doesn’t set a hard floor. Shares have been volatile this month. Traders still key off signals about appetite for new gaming machines and how fast its digital operations are expanding.

Buybacks carry execution risk, too. When liquidity dries up or shares bounce fast, large-scale repurchases get tricky—prices can be pushed higher. Boards might also pull back if they need the cash elsewhere.

Thursday’s session puts the focus on the daily buyback notice, with traders eyeing if the company sticks to its current buying rhythm following the stock’s recent drop.

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