Today: 25 June 2026
National Grid shares barely budge after UK grid upgrade update as Ofgem decision nears
10 February 2026
2 mins read

National Grid shares barely budge after UK grid upgrade update as Ofgem decision nears

London, Feb 10, 2026, 09:01 GMT — Regular session on.

  • National Grid shares ticked lower at the open but remained close to their 52-week peak.
  • The company has wrapped up a significant overhead line upgrade along a crucial route linking England and Scotland.
  • Ofgem’s upcoming licence decisions are on investors’ radar, with the unpredictable UK rates environment adding to the uncertainty.

National Grid slipped roughly 0.1% to 1,285 pence at 0901 GMT, holding close to its 52-week peak. The company pointed to new advances on network upgrades in northern England.

The power and gas network operator said Monday it’s finished upgrading the overhead line running from its Harker substation, just outside Carlisle, up to the Scottish border. Crews swapped out old circuits for higher-capacity wire and strung up a fresh 12-km circuit atop existing pylons to help clear the traffic jam on the grid. All told, over 90 km of overhead line was either replaced or newly installed. There’s still a 184-tonne transformer scheduled to arrive in March. Once that’s in, the new substations will feature gas-insulated switchgear without any sulphur hexafluoride (SF6)—the greenhouse gas that’s been a sticking point. “It improves reliability today and creates capacity for cleaner energy in the future,” construction director Mark Brindley said. nationalgrid.com

Timing is key here. Britain’s move to ramp up renewable energy is straining grid capacity and testing project timelines. The government, on Tuesday, announced its latest Contracts for Difference (CfD) auction landed 4.9 GW of solar and a total 6.2 GW in new renewables. CfDs, those government-backed price mechanisms, kick in when wholesale prices dip below a certain mark—topping up revenues—or pull money back when prices surge. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband says the plan is to “drive bills down for good” and shield consumers from wild swings in fossil fuel prices. Reuters

UK utilities are seeing active trading as political uncertainty rattles sterling and government bonds. Monday’s turmoil has investors on edge. “Changing the leadership … probably not going to change too much in reality,” said Nick Kennedy, FX strategist at Lloyds, as renewed questions swirl around Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s future. Reuters

Utility stocks often react to rate shifts, since their payouts go head-to-head with bond yields. When yields rise, those dividends lose some shine. On Tuesday, UK 10-year gilt yields slipped back to roughly 4.50%, retracing ground after Monday’s jump linked to the political turmoil. A gilt refers to a UK government bond.

Stepping back from the daily moves, regulation remains the wild card for National Grid. The company told investors it’s looking for Ofgem’s decision on RIIO-3 changes to its electricity transmission licence in February. After Ofgem rules, stakeholders get a 20-working-day window to review. National Grid says it’ll outline its own response sometime in early March. RIIO-3, for context, sets the multi-year revenue and incentive regime for network operators.

Ofgem continues to seek input on sections of the RIIO-3 package, specifically the “associated documents.” Stakeholders have until Feb. 26 to respond. Ofgem

RIIO-3 kicks off April 1 and stretches through March 31, 2031, taking in both electricity transmission and the gas side—distribution and transmission alike. That timeline brings the licence decision, plus whatever negotiations might follow, to the forefront for UK network operators.

SSE’s network arm and other UK grid players are subject to the same regulatory forces. If the settlement turns harsher, it’s unlikely the impact will be limited to National Grid; the effects would probably sweep across the whole sector.

Still, the immediate risk isn’t one-sided. A sharper selloff in rates, fresh political turbulence in the UK, or tougher licence conditions could sour sentiment in a hurry — regardless of how solid the daily construction updates look.

The FTSE 100 slipped at the start, with utilities and other defensive stocks finding themselves overshadowed by bigger-picture macro news rather than setting the tone.

National Grid has the RIIO-3 licence decision slated for February; investors are watching for the company’s reaction in early March. The group’s full-year numbers for 2025/26 will land on May 14.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

Stock Market Updates

Western Digital falls after AI-storage rally, investors look to Micron

Western Digital falls after AI-storage rally, investors look to Micron

25 June 2026
Western Digital (NASDAQ:WDC) shares dropped about 4% after a multi-week rally fueled by AI storage demand, as investors awaited Micron Technology’s earnings for new signals on enterprise storage spending; analysts cite a persistent hard-disk supply deficit that could support pricing into 2027, with Morgan Stanley raising its price target to $650.
BlackBerry falls with volume outpacing buyback plan ahead of earnings

BlackBerry falls with volume outpacing buyback plan ahead of earnings

25 June 2026
BlackBerry closed down 2.3% at $8.62 despite Stifel initiating coverage with a Buy and $12 target—39% above the close—while trading volume of 38.3 million shares far exceeded its entire buyback authorization, highlighting investor focus ahead of Thursday’s Q1 results and underscoring the limited impact of BlackBerry’s capital return plan.
Opendoor slides after landing in Russell 3000, liquidity and dilution concerns follow

Opendoor edges up before Russell 3000 move, soft housing numbers weigh

25 June 2026
Santos shares closed down 0.96% at A$7.24 after Brent crude slumped US$3.34 to US$73.74, cutting potential annual gross sales from its new Pikka project by about US$50 million at plateau rates; Pikka’s ramp to 80,000 barrels per day is key, as oil price swings now have a direct impact on Santos’ production-linked revenue and its US$2.5 billion net debt reduction target.
Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) stock slips as AI spending outpaces cloud infra sales

Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) stock slips as AI spending outpaces cloud infra sales

25 June 2026
Oracle plunged 4.62% to $157.53 after its annual report revealed fiscal 2026 capital expenditures soared to $55.7 billion—over three times cloud-infrastructure revenue—while free cash flow was negative $23.7 billion and restructuring costs surged, highlighting intensifying funding pressures despite a massive $638 billion backlog.
US Economic Calendar Today: Stock Futures Hold Steady as Traders Eye Fed Speeches, Treasury Buyback and Delayed Jobs Data
Previous Story

US Economic Calendar Today: Stock Futures Hold Steady as Traders Eye Fed Speeches, Treasury Buyback and Delayed Jobs Data

Accenture stock drops as CEO share-sale filing and $1.4 billion contract protest hit tape
Next Story

Accenture stock drops as CEO share-sale filing and $1.4 billion contract protest hit tape

Go toTop