London, March 16, 2026, 15:36 GMT
- Rolls-Royce stock hovered near 1,230p in Monday’s delayed London session, edging up roughly 1.2%. That comes after Friday’s 5.3% slide.
- The company disclosed a buyback of 1.82 million shares on March 13, bringing its total repurchases to 12.52 million since kicking off its current £2.3 billion program.
- The stock has rebounded, but it’s still trading far under its 1,420p high for the year. Investors are weighing the positives—buybacks and an improved outlook—against ongoing worries about supply-chain snags and oil prices.
Rolls-Royce Holdings stock edged up roughly 1.2% in London on Monday, changing hands near 1,230 pence. The modest gain recouped just a fraction of Friday’s 5.3% drop. The latest buyback filing, released ahead of the open, came before the move.
Rolls-Royce is in the spotlight as investors watch to see if hefty cash returns can keep its stock afloat when broader conditions shift. Back on Feb. 26, the company announced a giant £7 billion-£9 billion buyback, with £2.5 billion of that set for 2026. Even so, the shares remain far off their 1,420p high for the year.
The mood shifted quickly. On Monday, London’s FTSE 100 barely budged—energy shares climbed, but travel stocks slumped almost 2% as worries over Middle East turmoil weighed on oil and interest rates. Rolls-Royce straddles both camps, with exposure to civil aerospace, defence, and power systems.
Rolls-Royce revealed ahead of the session that it picked up 1,822,125 shares on March 13, part of the £2.3 billion buyback it flagged alongside full-year results. The company plans to cancel these shares, trimming the overall count. To date, it’s snapped up 12,524,748 shares through the programme, paying an average of 1,285.99 pence apiece.
When Rolls-Royce posted results on Feb. 26, it put core operating profit at £3.5 billion and free cash flow at £3.3 billion—what’s left after capital spending. The company is projecting operating profit for 2026 between £4.0 billion and £4.2 billion, and is planning a buyback that stretches out to 2028.
Chief Executive Tufan Erginbilgic put it this way: “Our transformation continues with pace and intensity.” Richard Hunter at Interactive Investor described the results as “sparkling,” though he pointed out that the group remains hungry, with “unfulfilled ambitions to maintain the momentum.” Rolls-Royce
According to Reuters, the new targets could narrow the gap between Rolls-Royce and GE Aerospace in the widebody engine space. For 2025, Rolls-Royce pointed to higher airline engine flying hours, growing data-centre power needs, and a pick-up in defense work as key factors shaping its outlook.
The short-term outlook remains messy. Rolls-Royce flagged that its 2026 cash-flow guidance factors in a £150 million-£200 million drag from ongoing supply-chain troubles, with parts still in short supply. Friday’s drop made clear: company wins can get swept aside fast when oil prices and inflation worries start to rattle investors.
Pascal Koeppel, chief investment officer at Vontobel SFA Investment Management, called Friday’s market shock “short term in nature,” but added, “the fear is larger” for now. That’s left Rolls-Royce navigating a strong turnaround narrative while contending with a market atmosphere far less favorable than just weeks prior. Reuters