Today: 14 July 2026
Rolls-Royce’s 8% Slide Tests a New 1,870p Price Target
14 July 2026
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Rolls-Royce’s 8% Slide Tests a New 1,870p Price Target

London, July 14, 2026, 10:08 (BST)

Rolls-Royce Holdings plc fell 2.2% to 1,383.8 pence by 09:58 BST on Tuesday, taking its decline from July 6 to 8.0%. The shares are now 9.7% below their 52-week high, a swift reset before half-year results.

The timing matters. Rolls-Royce reports on July 30; at a market value of about £115 billion, its 2026 guidance of £3.6 billion to £3.8 billion in free cash flow — cash left after operations and capital spending — implies a yield of 3.1% to 3.3%, while the planned £2.5 billion buyback equals roughly 2.2% of the equity value. Chief Executive Tufan Erginbilgic said in February that the guidance should put underlying operating profit in the prior mid-term range “two years earlier than planned.” AJ Bell

Published estimates leave almost no buffer above the middle of company guidance:

2026 measureCompany guidanceApril analyst consensusConsensus above midpoint
Underlying operating profit/EBIT£4.0bn–£4.2bn£4.132bn£32m, or 0.8%
Free cash flow£3.6bn–£3.8bn£3.734bn£34m, or 0.9%

The consensus snapshot was compiled from submissions by 12 analysts.

At Tuesday’s price, the consensus forecast of 37.8 pence in 2026 earnings per share gives a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 36.6 times. P/E is the share price divided by expected earnings per share. With published forecasts less than 1% above the guidance midpoints, a straight reiteration may struggle to reverse the pullback; investors have reason to look for a guidance increase or firmer evidence of margin and cash upside.

Operational news has been positive but financially thin. Rolls-Royce said Tuesday that four 1-megawatt mtu generator sets power the Indian Navy’s newly commissioned INS Mahendragiri; G S Selwyn, an executive vice president in India, said the technology was designed for “dependable performance and operational assurance.” A day earlier, the group disclosed the supply of 40 engines for 10 hybrid vessels serving Petrobras , with entry into service scheduled from 2026 to 2028; Marine Americas Vice President Magdalena Peters cited “continued growth in the commercial marine market,” but neither release stated a contract value. Rolls-Royce

Jefferies Financial Group analyst Chloe Lemarie raised her Rolls-Royce target to 1,870 pence from 1,530 pence and retained a “Buy” rating last week. The new target stands 35.1% above Tuesday’s quoted price. Lemarie expects the company to raise its annual targets because of Power Systems strength, making the July results a test of whether order momentum is producing enough profit and cash to close that gap. finanzen.net

Monday’s close shows that investors were cutting exposure across the engine sector, not only Rolls-Royce:

CompanyJuly 13 closeDaily move
Rolls-Royce Holdings £14.15-1.60%
GE Aerospace $353.42-1.63%
Safran €330.10-1.79%

The unusually close moves point to a sector-wide de-risking element. Rolls-Royce’s further 2.2% decline on Tuesday, however, kept the pressure on ahead of its own results.

But the downside case is not only valuation. Rolls-Royce said on April 30 that it had completed more than £750 million of this year’s buyback and expected to mitigate the then-current financial impact of Middle East disruption; on Tuesday, renewed U.S.-Iran tensions sent Brent crude up about 3% to $85, pushed European shares down 0.7% and knocked travel and leisure stocks 2.6% lower. Longer route closures or airline capacity cuts could reduce the flying hours that feed Rolls-Royce’s civil-engine service revenue.

The July 30 test is therefore narrow. Rolls-Royce needs to show that Power Systems orders are turning into cash, that civil-aerospace service income can absorb fresh disruption, and that its 2028 cash target is not carrying too much of the valuation argument. A guidance increase would support Lemarie’s case; a hold with no new cash evidence leaves 1,870 pence as a broker number while the market trades the stock near 1,384 pence.

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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