London, March 3, 2026, 07:56 GMT — Premarket
- Just before London got underway, a fresh share buyback update dropped.
- Investors remain cautious, with defence programme headlines and swings in energy markets driving sentiment.
- The next thing to watch: management’s investor meetings in March.
Rolls-Royce Holdings (RR.L) snapped up roughly 1.09 million shares on Monday, picking them up at prices ranging from 1,288 to 1,348 pence apiece as part of its ongoing buyback, with plans to cancel the lot. That brings total repurchases to 2.91 million shares since the start of the programme, the company said, and leaves 8.425 billion shares outstanding. Shares finished Monday at 1,354 pence, unchanged. That’s still about 5% off the stock’s 52-week high. Investegate
Timing’s crucial here. Rolls-Royce has seen plenty of action and volume in the FTSE 100. When markets are thin just before the open, buyback orders can move the needle, especially if headlines are flooding in and stirring up the tape.
It’s a tricky moment for investors juggling both angles. Rolls-Royce, with engines flying out to airlines and hardware aimed at defence clients, finds its shares pulled by travel buzz one minute, then geopolitics the next.
The company also put out fresh numbers on its capital structure, noting total voting rights stand at 8.428 billion ordinary shares as of Feb. 28. That’s the figure shareholders use to determine if they’re obliged to disclose their holdings under UK transparency regulations. Investegate
Tufan Erginbilgic, chief executive, told the Guardian he’s “definitely be open” to having Germany join the UK-led Global Combat Air Programme—Tempest—where Rolls-Royce is handling the engine. Early Monday, Rolls-Royce shares slipped, while defence stocks such as BAE Systems saw gains, the paper noted. The Guardian
London’s mood was uneasy. Stocks tumbled Monday, with the FTSE 100 dropping 1.2% by the end of trade as oil and gas prices jumped, according to the Guardian. “WTI could rise towards $80, or even $90, a barrel in the coming week,” City Index analyst Fiona Cincotta said in the outlet’s live blog. The Guardian
For traders, it’s a straightforward call right now: does the buyback actually prop up the stock, especially if energy-driven swings keep hammering anything tied to airlines and travel demand?
The risk here is straightforward. Prolonged travel disruption? That chips away at investor confidence in airline flying hours — and those hours are key for engine makers’ lucrative aftermarket business. Defence isn’t immune either. Rhetoric costs nothing, but actual timelines, partner commitments and shifting government budgets can put programs behind schedule.
Management is heading out to meet investors next. Rolls-Royce’s calendar shows a US & Canada roadshow scheduled for March 10, followed by a spot at the Bank of America Global Industrials Conference on March 17. rolls-royce.com