LSEG Stock Price Today: London Stock Exchange Shares Buck FTSE 100 Selloff on Buyback, Bond Deal Focus

LSEG Stock Price Today: London Stock Exchange Shares Buck FTSE 100 Selloff on Buyback, Bond Deal Focus

March 20, 2026

LONDON, March 20, 2026, 20:09 GMT

London Stock Exchange Group managed a 0.51% rise to 8,662 pence, defying the broader London slump that saw the FTSE 100 slide 1.4% on fresh oil and rate jitters. Roughly 3.0 million shares changed hands. The stock’s uptick recouped some ground after losses in the last two sessions.

The development is under the microscope as investors continue to gauge whether LSEG can win back confidence after Elliott Management took a stake and called for changes to its portfolio, margins, and capital returns. There’s also the AI overhang clouding its data business. That £3 billion share buyback last month — the largest LSEG has ever done — jolted the stock higher, but calls for stronger growth haven’t let up.

Another round of filings landed in the last 24 hours. LSEG US Fin Corp dropped an offering memorandum Thursday, detailing $1.5 billion in notes maturing 2029, $500 million maturing 2031, plus $1 billion due 2036. The prospectus pegs net proceeds at about $2.97 billion, earmarked for debt refinancing and general corporate uses.

The group disclosed in a Friday filing that it repurchased 348,774 ordinary shares on March 19, paying a volume-weighted average price of 8,601.56 pence. LSEG plans to cancel those shares, according to the statement.

LSEG had more to say on Thursday, rolling out a set of leadership moves. Tom Stenhouse steps in as chief executive of Turquoise, the group’s pan-European trading platform. Simon McQuoid-Mason, who recently arrived from SIX, will now handle a broader slice of the European equities business. Two new hires land in Amsterdam as well. “These shifts strengthen our aim to operate competitive equities trading venues across Europe,” said Charlie Walker, deputy CEO at London Stock Exchange plc. LSEG

Shareholders haven’t really budged from their positions. After LSEG lifted its guidance and announced the buyback on Feb. 26, Frederick Kerr-Smiley at Ninety One noted he’d been hoping for a “chunky buyback”. Stephen Yiu at Blue Whale stuck to his stance: investors “want growth”. JPMorgan’s analysts argued the company’s firmer tone on momentum might help dispel some of the AI worries that have weighed on the shares. Reuters

Sell-side sentiment hasn’t shifted—still firmly constructive. On March 16, LSEG’s investor-relations consensus page listed 16 buy ratings, zero holds, and not a single sell. Target price: 12,065 pence.

Still, the short-term picture could get tricky. Traders are betting about a 70% chance the Bank of England hikes rates as soon as April, and see up to three quarter-point bumps by year-end after policymakers flagged higher inflation risk. Citigroup called the timing of any move “path dependent” and tough to call. For LSEG, that means facing a tougher rates environment right as it heads to the debt markets. Reuters

Friday’s uptick came off as more of a pause than a decisive pivot. LSEG still ended up short of its March 17 close at 8,844 pence, even after the rebound. Right now, traders are zeroing in on the buyback, the refinancing plan, and what the Turquoise reshuffle brings next.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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