London, March 12, 2026, 20:15 GMT
Experian shares closed lower for a second straight session on Thursday, ending down 0.61% at 2,755 pence, as the credit-data group’s latest funding move and ongoing buyback failed to steady the stock. 1
Why it matters now: the shares remain far below their 4,101 pence 52-week high from July, and Experian’s core credit-check and mortgage businesses are exposed to swings in lender appetite and interest-rate expectations. 2
Company statements over the last two days show management is still active on capital. Experian said on Tuesday that its U.S. financing arm had priced €300 million of floating-rate notes due March 16, 2028 — debt whose interest bill resets with short-term rates — and said the proceeds would go to general corporate purposes, including potential acquisitions and debt repayment. A day later, an RNS statement showed the group had bought back 224,000 shares on March 10 at a weighted average price of 2,812.8382 pence, and would cancel them. 3
That repurchase sits inside the $1 billion buyback programme Experian unveiled on Jan. 30. The company said then that its medium-term financial framework, capital allocation policy and dividend policy were unchanged. 4
Thursday’s backdrop did the stock no favours. London’s FTSE 100 closed down 0.4% as oil climbed back to $100 a barrel after attacks on fuel tankers and renewed threats around the Strait of Hormuz pushed investors to trim hopes for Bank of England easing. “The longer the disruption goes on, the greater the impact on energy prices and in turn global inflation,” AJ Bell’s Danni Hewson said. 5
That matters for Experian more than the headline index move suggests. Reuters reported in January that a large share of the group’s revenue comes from credit checks, mortgage inquiries and fraud screenings in North America, and those volumes move with rate expectations and lender demand; the stock hit a 19-month low that day even after the company posted 8% third-quarter revenue growth on an underlying basis and held full-year guidance. 6
A competitive fight is still running underneath. VantageScore, an alternative credit-scoring model owned by Experian, Equifax and TransUnion, is trying to push deeper into U.S. mortgages, while Fair Isaac’s direct-selling model has pressured bureau economics. Equifax chief executive Mark Begor said last month that VantageScore adoption should accelerate as U.S. agencies finish their technology and planning work. 7
Experian said in its January trading update that it will report full-year results on May 20. That leaves a gap of more than two months before the next formal readout. 8
The risk is plain enough. Capital returns may not do much for valuation if higher oil keeps inflation sticky, rate cuts delayed and software shares under pressure. “I don’t think the buybacks are enough,” Peter Tuz, president of Chase Investment Counsel, told Reuters earlier this month, saying investors still need evidence that AI will not fundamentally hurt a specific software business. 9
For now, the numbers are blunt: 2,826 pence on Tuesday, 2,772 on Wednesday, 2,755 on Thursday. Tuesday’s bounce has already faded. 1