London, Feb 13, 2026, 09:36 (GMT) — Regular session
- Halma shares climbed roughly 3% in early London trading, outpacing the wider index.
- Investors are on edge ahead of U.S. inflation data, following a sell-off driven by AI stocks.
- Halma’s trading update lands March 12, and traders are eyeing it for the company’s next catalyst.
Halma jumped 3.1% to 3,856 pence early Friday, easily outpacing the broader FTSE 100. Shares were up 114 pence, pushing the health and safety tech firm’s market cap to roughly 14.6 billion pounds. 1
London stocks barely budged even as a tech-driven rout swept Asian markets overnight, fueled by renewed concerns about artificial intelligence shaking up the sector. “The prevailing tone in markets is a rotation toward more defensive areas of the equity market,” said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone. Investors are hanging back ahead of U.S. consumer price index figures due out later on Friday. 2
Halma shares hovered between 3,774 and 3,860 pence during the session, staying close to the upper bound of their 52-week range, according to Investing.com data. With the price camped out so high, even minor shifts in the broader market could weigh as heavily as any news from the company itself. 3
Halma hasn’t put out any new RNS filings lately. The last entries on Investegate, both dated Jan. 13, just cover director and PDMR shareholdings. 4
Halma’s last headline on the deal front came back in early January, when the company announced its acquisition of Safetec, an Italian supplier specializing in integrated fire and gas safety systems for industrial settings. Chief executive Marc Ronchetti called the move one that “further enhances our capabilities in fire and gas safety systems for complex industrial environments.” Safetec’s CEO, Marco Stumpo, said the business would “retain our autonomy, while benefiting from Halma’s global network and expertise to accelerate our international growth.” 5
Even so, Halma shares remain pricey. The stock fetches a price-to-earnings ratio near 39.7, per Hargreaves Lansdown — a level that links the stock price to company earnings and signals a premium valuation. The dividend yield isn’t much to write home about either, sitting at roughly 0.6%. Anyone paying up for a high multiple like this takes on more risk if the company stumbles on growth. 6
Halma has a provisional trading update set for March 12, according to its financial calendar, with the year wrapping up March 31. Full-year results are scheduled for June 11. 7
That March update lands with traders zeroed in on order intake, pricing details, and signs that the latest bolt-on acquisitions aren’t slicing into margins. Shifts in management’s tone about demand—across safety, environmental monitoring, and healthcare—could jolt the stock either way.
The macro backdrop could end up inflicting just as much pain as any company-specific news before then. A U.S. inflation number coming in above forecasts would probably push expectations for rate cuts out further, putting pressure on richly valued stocks—including those in so-called “defensive” sectors.
Halma jumped out of the gate Friday. Now, it’s a question of whether that strength sticks through the close—and if the March 12 trading update offers more substance than just rotation-driven moves.