QBE share price today: buyback tally climbs as fresh staff share filings land ahead of dividend date

QBE share price today: buyback tally climbs as fresh staff share filings land ahead of dividend date

February 27, 2026

Sydney, Feb 27, 2026, 18:36 AEDT — Market closed

  • QBE finished Friday’s session 0.28% higher at A$21.73.
  • The filing indicated 753,934 shares were repurchased on Feb. 24 under the group’s A$450 million on-market buyback plan.
  • Additional filings outlined how shares were issued to employees, vested, or lapsed as part of the company’s incentive schemes

QBE Insurance Group Limited ticked up on Friday, following a series of ASX filings about ongoing buybacks and fresh staff share-plan moves. Shares finished at A$21.73, a gain of 0.06 Australian dollars, or 0.28%.

QBE heads into its upcoming dividend dates while a share buyback is still active. The insurer has set its final dividend at 78 Australian cents per share, with 30% franking—so only a portion comes with Australian tax credits. The record date lands on March 6, and shareholders can expect payment by April 17, according to the company.

QBE disclosed in its daily buyback update that it picked up 753,934 shares on Feb. 24, spending around A$16.4 million, with prices ranging from A$21.48 to A$22.05. That brings the total repurchased so far to about 5.39 million shares, costing roughly A$107.5 million, from its up-to-A$450 million on-market buyback program.

QBE’s latest filing details an application to quote 4.5 million ordinary shares, issued back on Feb. 23 as part of an employee incentive scheme. In the same document, conditional rights tied to 5,260,288 shares are set to vest between Feb. 25 and March 2, with allocations singled out for top management, including CEO Andrew Horton.

QBE on Friday revealed it had issued or transferred 77,363 employee conditional rights as of Feb. 23. These rights are restricted and remain unquoted until set conditions are met. According to the company, the “QShare” program—rolled out in 2023—aims to boost employee share ownership and retention. Company Announcements

In a separate filing, 416,088 employee conditional rights expired on Feb. 23, with QBE citing unmet or unsatisfiable conditions. The company clarified the lapses spanned from Jan. 1 through Feb. 23, and included rights held by key management personnel that dropped off as of Feb. 23.

Investors are watching the basic math: buybacks cut the share count, but employee stock plans can increase it, depending on whether shares are newly issued or bought on the market. Ultimately, it’s the net number that shapes earnings per share and the ability to cover dividends—not the details of any one filing dropped on a particular morning.

QBE has been pointing to capital returns since its annual results last week. “The year ahead appears constructive for further growth,” Horton said at the time. QBE DEV

Insurers can’t control the weather. Catastrophe claims flare up, reinsurance prices jump, or a cluster of outsized losses can quickly erode margins. If markets shift or capital requirements tighten, buybacks are the first thing to hit the brakes.

The clock’s ticking. Traders eye Monday’s market open for fresh buyback disclosures, zeroing in on QBE as the March 6 dividend record date approaches and the cut-off looms for choices on its dividend and share plans.

Konrad Wysocki

Konrad Wysocki is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Rzeszów, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

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