LONDON, May 1, 2026, 20:10 BST
Prudential plc snapped up 488,861 ordinary shares on April 30, pushing ahead with its $1.2 billion buyback program due to run through 2026. The Asia-focused insurer moved after posting stronger first-quarter new business profit. Shares were purchased at a volume-weighted average of £10.9289 and will be cancelled, leaving the group with 2,520,118,359 shares and voting rights outstanding following the deal.
Timing is key here. Prudential is aiming to prove it can convert growth in Asia and Africa into shareholder cash, even as markets, currencies, and inflation continue to weigh on demand for insurance and savings. The buyback, scheduled to wrap up by Dec. 18, 2026, totals $1.2 billion—$500 million from ongoing capital returns, plus $700 million linked to the ICICI Prudential Asset Management listing.
The buyback comes on the heels of what Prudential called a “solid” quarterly update—emphasis, though, was kept in check. New business profit hit $686 million for the first quarter, up 10% year-on-year at constant exchange rates. That measure strips out the impact of currency moves. APE sales—the industry’s yardstick for new premiums—climbed 6% to $1.82 billion. Prudential plc
Margins gave Prudential a lift. The insurer’s new business margin moved up 2 percentage points, now sitting at 38%. New business profit growth hit double digits in Hong Kong, Mainland China, and Malaysia. Chief Executive Anil Wadhwani called the performance “broad-based across segments” and highlighted ongoing gains in both agency and bank distribution. London South East
But there’s a catch. According to Reuters, Prudential pointed to energy-driven inflation as a potential threat for smaller South Asian firms and consumer confidence. UOB Kay Hian analyst Kenny Lim Yong Hui noted that if oil prices remain high, the impact from increased energy costs might become visible in late Q2 numbers.
Not everyone was convinced the quarter marked a turning point. Morningstar’s Henry Heathfield pointed out Prudential’s latest update “lacks energy,” highlighting 6% APE growth as underwhelming and calling out new business profit up 10%—still short of Prudential’s own 15%-20% longer-term target for that figure. Morningstar
The stock closed May 1 in London at 1,100.50 pence, notching a 0.23% gain, according to Bloomberg data. The FTSE 100 slipped 0.14%. For investors, shares held largely flat, the buyback news balanced by uncertainty over sales trends.
Rivalry is picking up. On April 30, AIA Group reported a 13% jump in first-quarter value of new business, hitting $1.76 billion. Annualised new premiums climbed 16%. The company also flagged a $1.7 billion buyback that kicked off in March.
Prudential’s focus isn’t what it used to be. The company now deals solely in life and health insurance, plus asset management, targeting Greater China, ASEAN, India, and Africa. Its stock trades mainly in Hong Kong and London, with a secondary listing in Singapore and ADRs on the New York market.
The investment pitch hasn’t changed much for now: new sales have to climb, margins can’t slip, and the buyback needs to continue without hinting at a lack of fresh growth ideas. In the coming months, we’ll find out if that first-quarter bump was a launching pad—or merely enough to keep the capital-return narrative alive.