London, March 5, 2026, 09:01 GMT
BAE Systems plc disclosed it repurchased 97,895 shares on March 4, paying a volume-weighted average of 2,237.12 pence per share and intends to cancel the stock. That brings total buybacks under the second leg of its program to 18,325,554 shares at an average price of 1,856.03 pence, according to the company. Investegate
This ordinary-seeming buy shows up in a market that’s been far from ordinary lately. “The merest whiff that a resolution to the conflict is on the cards is helping European stocks rebound,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, referencing the shaky mood tied to the Middle East war. Reuters
European stocks slid on Tuesday, pressured by concerns that the war could drag on and surging oil prices might spur fresh inflation. “Any ceasefire for now looks like a remote possibility,” said Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter. Reuters
BAE packaged the second tranche of its buyback—just part of its broader three-year, £1.5 billion initiative unveiled in 2023—into a statement in July 2025. The company tapped Morgan Stanley for up to £500 million in on-market purchases, aiming to wrap this tranche by June 30, 2026, with all shares set for cancellation. Investegate
BAE has shown up in the market nearly every session. On March 3, the company picked up 99,135 shares at a volume-weighted average of 2,209.12 pence, according to a separate filing. Investegate
BAE shares ended Wednesday at 22.69 pounds, up 2.21%, just 0.87% shy of their 52-week peak. MarketWatch put trading volume at 6.6 million shares. MarketWatch
Demand continues to set the tone for BAE. The company in February posted a 12% jump in full-year operating profit, beating forecasts, and revealed its order backlog had climbed to a record 83.6 billion pounds. Looking ahead, BAE is targeting 7% to 9% sales growth and operating profit growth between 9% and 11% by 2026. Chief executive Charles Woodburn described the backdrop as a “new era” for defence spending. Reuters
Rival firms are tapping into the same demand narrative. Thales, the French defence and aerospace heavyweight, noted a pickup in appetite for air-defence gear—CEO Patrice Caine flagged the Gulf conflict and remarked, “Nobody knows today how it will evolve.” The company supplies radar and related systems. Reuters
Buybacks reduce the overall share count when companies retire those shares, boosting earnings per share without any change in total profit. They also send a message: the company believes it has more cash than it needs for investments.
Still, they aren’t steering the stock by themselves. Should tensions in the Middle East ease, or officials push back purchase timetables because of fiscal strains, that sector rally could fizzle fast. BAE, for its part, is hovering not far from its high.