London, March 17, 2026, 16:49 GMT
Shares in London Stock Exchange Group edged higher Tuesday, trading at 8,846 pence on the bid and 8,848 pence on the offer as of 1625 GMT. The lift followed news of another round of stock purchases tied to the £3 billion buyback unveiled last month. LSEG was up around 1% for the session. The FTSE 100 also advanced.
The daily repurchase updates are closely watched, offering investors a pulse on just how forcefully LSEG is deploying its buyback program—management’s main lever as shares slide, Elliott Management ramps up activist pressure, and debates swirl over generative AI’s threat to its data business. LSEG also released its AGM notice on Tuesday, confirming an April 23 shareholder meeting. That sets the stage for the board’s next public defense of its capital moves and strategic direction.
Bulls are still in control, analysts suggest. As of March 16, LSEG’s consensus tally showed 16 analysts with a buy on the stock—zero holds or sells. Average price target came in at 12,065 pence. The stock closed March 13 at 8,746 pence.
On March 16, LSEG picked up 343,251 shares at an average 8,736.31 pence apiece, according to Tuesday’s buyback filing. That followed a March 13 purchase of 344,841 shares at 8,699.64 pence, as disclosed in the previous day’s release. Total spend for those two sessions: just shy of £60 million.
Monday’s regulatory filing showed Chief Financial Officer Michel-Alain Proch picked up 11,277 shares as a restricted award vested, then sold off 5,304—priced at £85.567768 apiece—to handle tax, social security, and dealing costs. PDMR, in UK filings, stands for person discharging managerial responsibilities.
The buyback dropped just as LSEG rolled out better-than-expected annual results. In its update last month, the group reported a 7.1% increase in total income for 2025 and set a target for 2026 organic constant- currency growth between 6.5% and 7.5%. Executives, for their part, insisted LSEG’s proprietary datasets have staying power, even with investors weighing how fast AI might upend the market data and analytics business.
Frederick Kerr-Smiley over at Ninety One told Reuters on Feb. 26 he’d “been keen for them to do a chunky buyback.” JPMorgan’s analysts, meanwhile, pointed out that the company’s comments on momentum could lift sentiment and ease some of the AI disruption worries that have been dragging on the shares. Reuters
Still, the backing comes with strings attached. Stephen Yiu, chief investment officer at the Blue Whale growth fund, made it clear after the results: “we want growth.” He also cautioned that Elliott could ramp up pressure if LSEG fails to perform in the coming quarters. Reuters
That’s the context for the competition. LSEG now faces comparisons with data and market- infrastructure players like Deutsche Boerse and S&P Global—it’s no longer just seen as a stock exchange operator. Back in February, Reuters Breakingviews pointed out that LSEG shares traded in line with European exchange peers but still lagged U.S. information-services giants, making buybacks, margins, and the AI story key issues for valuation ahead of the April 23 AGM.