Tesco share price: what to watch after Friday’s close as rate and wage bets shift
8 February 2026
2 mins read

Tesco share price: what to watch after Friday’s close as rate and wage bets shift

London, February 8, 2026, 09:40 GMT — Market closed

  • Tesco ended the session at 452.10 pence, a gain of 0.62%.
  • UK stocks finished the week on a positive note, with investors parsing signals from the Bank of England on interest rates.
  • Supermarket pay hikes and renewed funding chatter at a competitor have shoved costs back into focus.

Tesco Plc finished at 452.10 pence on Friday, gaining 0.62%. The UK market is closed for the weekend, so trading will pick up again Monday. 1

Tesco barely budged, yet the company now finds itself caught between two ongoing questions: just how soon will UK interest rates actually drop, and how aggressively are wages and pricing still feeding into the grocery sector?

That’s important for investors right now. Grocery runs on volume and razor-thin margins, so even minor changes—whether it’s labor costs ticking higher or a pricing shift—can hit earnings harder than a fleeting sales headline ever would.

The FTSE 100 edged 0.6% higher Friday, marking its second consecutive weekly increase. Bank shares did the heavy lifting, even as RELX slipped again. Investors were also watching signals from the Bank of England, which indicated Thursday that rate cuts could be on the table if inflation keeps cooling. 2

On Friday, Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill urged caution, flagging that a recent drop in inflation—largely the result of temporary effects—shouldn’t be overinterpreted. The central bank left its Bank Rate untouched at 3.75% this week. “The disinflation process is still not complete,” Pill said. 3

Labour costs are squeezing margins again. Lidl GB plans to lift entry-level hourly pay from March 1, tacking on a 29 million pound bill after Aldi UK and Sainsbury’s made similar pay adjustments. Britain’s minimum wage bump kicks in April, according to Reuters. 4

Tesco’s caught in the middle, too. Higher wages help keep staff and improve service, sure, but they’re also pushing costs higher—just as price-sensitive shoppers keep switching to cheaper options and competitors turn up the heat with fresh deals.

The sector’s balance sheets have come into focus, too. Morrisons is looking at ways to raise as much as 1 billion pounds, using some of its owned store properties as collateral, Sky News reported Friday. CBRE has been brought in to consider possibilities, Reuters said. 5

Tesco hasn’t given a big update since January, when it said it was expecting full-year profit to land toward the top of its guidance, following a bump in underlying UK sales during Christmas. “Competition is as intense as ever,” chief executive Ken Murphy said. 6

Tesco hasn’t paused its share repurchases. Back in January, the company disclosed it picked up close to 480,000 shares, moving to cancel them as part of the ongoing £1.45 billion buyback. 7

But laying out the risks isn’t hard. If wage inflation drives up costs for the industry while a pricing war leaves shelf prices stuck, margins can take a hit fast — and a hesitant Bank of England might leave households under pressure for longer.

Tesco’s next key event comes on April 16, when it’s set to report full-year earnings. Until then, investors will be watching closely to see how wage changes in the sector might start showing up in prices. 8

Stock Market Today

Tesco share price: what to watch after Friday’s close as rate and wage bets shift

Tesco share price: what to watch after Friday’s close as rate and wage bets shift

8 February 2026
Tesco shares closed at 452.10 pence on Friday, up 0.62%, as UK markets ended the week higher. Investors weighed Bank of England signals on interest rates and rising supermarket wage costs, with Lidl and rivals announcing pay increases ahead of April’s minimum wage hike. Morrisons is considering raising up to £1 billion against its store portfolio, according to Sky News. Tesco continues its share buyback program after a January profit forecast upgrade.
Imperial Brands share price: what to watch before IMB reopens after Friday jump

Imperial Brands share price: what to watch before IMB reopens after Friday jump

8 February 2026
Imperial Brands shares closed Friday up 1.49% at 3,341 pence, ahead of the Feb. 19 ex-dividend date and ongoing buybacks. The company repurchased 88,533 shares last week as part of a £1.45 billion program. Investors are watching interest rate signals and sector competition in nicotine pouches. British American Tobacco reports results Feb. 12.
Imperial Brands share price: what to watch before IMB reopens after Friday jump
Previous Story

Imperial Brands share price: what to watch before IMB reopens after Friday jump

Go toTop