London, May 9, 2026, 20:18 BST
- Prudential plc picked up 252,594 ordinary shares on May 7, according to a U.S. filing, and is set to cancel them.
- Shares last changed hands in London at 1,139p, slipping 2.83%. The market had already shut.
- First-quarter growth is in the mix, and the buyback is on the table, yet inflation and Asian consumer demand are still the key areas to watch.
Prudential plc continued its 2026 share buyback program, snapping up 252,594 ordinary shares from JP Morgan Securities on May 7. The average price landed at £11.8321 per share, with the insurer confirming these shares are set for cancellation. After this move, the Asia-focused group will have 2,518,993,447 shares in circulation—voting rights unchanged.
The timing is key: capital returns are landing just as shares slipped in a choppy session and patchy Asian insurance demand clouds the picture. Hargreaves Lansdown pegged Prudential’s London shares at 1,139p, down 2.83%. The FTSE 100 also lost ground, off 0.43%, with the market already shut.
This latest buyback falls under Prudential’s broader January plan to repurchase as much as $1.2 billion of shares through 2026—$500 million coming from ongoing capital returns, the other $700 million tied to proceeds from the ICICI Prudential Asset Management IPO. Back in January, Prudential said the effort’s goal was to trim issued share capital and hand more cash back to investors.
This buyback comes on the heels of Prudential’s latest results. Last month, the company said new business profit climbed 10% year-over-year in the first quarter at constant exchange rates, reaching $686 million. Annual premium equivalent sales picked up 6% to $1.82 billion, while the new business margin added 2 percentage points, landing at 38%.
Prudential CEO Anil Wadhwani pointed to “double digit new business profit growth” alongside “resilient performance,” even with choppy markets and geopolitical headwinds in the mix. The insurer said it bought back roughly 20 million shares, spending $312 million in the first quarter. Prudential
Some investors weren’t impressed by the numbers. Morningstar equity analyst Henry Heathfield called Prudential’s update “lacking energy” and said it was basically on track, adding that the shares looked “fairly valued” compared to his £12.70 fair value estimate. The 10% increase in new business profit fell short of Prudential’s own medium-term growth goal of 15% to 20%, Heathfield noted. Morningstar
Asia’s momentum and share buybacks are top of mind for peers lately. AIA Group snapped up 1.3 million shares on May 8 for HK$112.2 million, per a Reuters report that cited a Hong Kong exchange filing. Sun Life this week logged a 17% increase in underlying net income from its Asia segment. Manulife’s turn comes next week.
There’s a risk that buybacks alone won’t make up for weaker demand should inflation bite harder or markets turn choppy. Prudential has flagged energy-fueled inflation as a likely drag on consumer sentiment in smaller ASEAN economies, according to Reuters. UOB Kay Hian analyst Kenny Lim Yong Hui points out that “second-order effects from higher energy costs” could start appearing if oil prices remain high. Reuters
Prudential, having shifted its focus from its legacy UK and U.S. businesses, now does most of its business across Greater China, ASEAN, India, and Africa. Shares trade primarily in both Hong Kong and London, with additional listings in Singapore and New York via American depositary receipts.
What comes next for Prudential isn’t about continued buyback filings. The question is whether profit growth can stay within range of its own targets—enough, at least, so that investors see the falling share count as genuine support for the stock, not simply a backstop.