London, June 12, 2026, 14:10 (BST)
- Legal & General traded at about 278–279p on Friday, gaining around 0.7%. The FTSE 100 was higher too.
- The high dividend yield and £1.2 billion buyback are still the stock’s main props, though consensus price targets now point to little upside from here.
- Legal & General’s next big catalyst is its half-year results on August 5, 2026.
Legal & General Group Plc edged up on Friday, trading higher as London stocks rallied. AJ Bell quoted the stock at 278.4p to sell, 278.5p to buy, up 0.72%. Hargreaves Lansdown put it up 0.76% at 278.3p/278.5p. Legal & General’s own site listed shares at 279.0p at 09:53 on June 12.
FTSE 100 up 1.1% as peace hopes lift UK shares The FTSE 100 climbed 1.1% to 10,414.02 by 10:59 GMT, Reuters said, as optimism over a possible Middle East peace deal boosted most UK stocks. But the wider economic picture wasn’t strong: Reuters noted UK GDP shrank 0.1% in April. Danni Hewson at AJ Bell said the numbers suggest a “summer of sluggishness” with both global conflict and uncertainty at home still pressuring growth. Reuters
Legal & General’s share price hasn’t moved on any new news. The main focus remains on whether the payout justifies the risks of holding a capital-heavy insurer and asset manager. AJ Bell data shows the dividend yield is 7.89%—that’s the annual payout as a share of the current price. Hargreaves Lansdown said the latest dividend gets paid June 4, 2026, ex-dividend April 23, and pegged the group’s market value at about £15.27 billion.
Bulls point to cash returns and Legal & General’s exposure to the retirement market. In March, the company posted 2025 core operating profit of £1.62 billion, a 6% increase, and core operating EPS up 9%. Pro forma Solvency II coverage stood at 210%. Legal & General announced a £1.2 billion share buyback. Solvency II is the UK and European insurers’ capital measure for risks. CEO António Simões called it a “strong financial performance for 2025” and said L&G had made “meaningful progress in reshaping” the business. Legal & General Group
Legal & General said it posted £11.8 billion in global pension risk transfer deals in 2025, breaking out £10.4 billion for the UK market. Reported global assets under management stood at £1.2 trillion. Pension risk transfer (PRT) shifts pension liabilities from a scheme to an insurer. This market is still a key part of Legal & General’s pitch to investors since PRT business brings long-term cash flows and helps drive demand for asset management.
Valuation and capital sensitivity are the key bear arguments. According to Investors Chronicle/LSEG consensus, 13 analysts have a median 12-month price target of 257p—below the latest 276.3p price. Targets run from 185p up to 340p. The recommendations are mixed: 1 buy, 3 outperform, 7 hold, 3 sell, and 2 strong sell as of June 4. Legal & General has income appeal, but the data points to a market that isn’t calling the shares a clear bargain.
The next big event is half-year results on August 5. Legal & General Group’s ex-dividend date is set for August 20, with the record date a day later and the dividend due to be paid on September 25. Investors are watching to see if the buyback is running smoothly without hitting capital, if margins in asset management are getting better, and if pension risk transfer volumes are still profitable and not just big.
Legal & General is trading near 278p. The stock mainly appeals to investors seeking income who are fine with insurer balance sheet risk and exposure to the UK economy. The dividend yield and share buyback give a decent case for returns, but based on consensus targets, the shares look more fairly valued than cheap. A better bull case needs August results to confirm steady capital generation, strong Solvency II, and ongoing traction in retirement and asset management. If any of these miss, the shares could look riskier at this price.