Prudential stock drops in London afternoon trade after buyback news

Prudential stock drops in London afternoon trade after buyback news

June 17, 2026

London, June 17, 2026, 16:05 BST

  • Prudential shares slipped in late London trading, trailing a flat FTSE 100.
  • New filings in Hong Kong show more shares canceled and another buyback in London.
  • Investors are weighing capital returns against Asia growth, as well as rates and cross-border China risks.

Prudential plc shares in London slipped on Wednesday. The latest filing showed the Asia-focused insurer kept shrinking its share count with ongoing buybacks. According to delayed LSEG numbers from Investors Chronicle, the shares traded at 1,002p, off 0.4%. Volume was 1.74 million by 15:49 BST.

Prudential’s buyback is in focus now. The company is buying its own shares, a move aimed at cutting shares outstanding and lifting returns per share. This is a big piece of how Prudential is pitching its equity story this year. The timing comes as the UK market looks softer. Reuters said the FTSE 100 was down earlier, with investors watching May inflation data ahead of the Bank of England call on Thursday.

“For the investor it is a dilemma; good news for the economy’s resilience is bad news as it justifies a rate hike,” Nick Saunders, chief executive of Webull UK, told Reuters after UK CPI stayed at 2.8% in May. The Bank of England is seen holding rates at 3.75% on Thursday, according to Reuters. Reuters

Prudential said in a Hong Kong filing it cancelled 407,779 ordinary shares on June 16, leaving 2,514,964,803 issued. The company also reported buying 385,717 shares on the London Stock Exchange the same day for about 3.9 million pounds. Prices on those trades ranged from 10.01 to 10.20 pounds, and all are set for cancellation.

Prudential kicked off a $1.2 billion buyback for 2026 in January, with plans to wrap up the repurchase by Dec. 18. The buyback draws from $500 million in ongoing capital and another $700 million raised through the initial public offering of ICICI Prudential Asset Management. CEO Anil Wadhwani said at launch the company was sticking to its goal of “high quality, sustainable growth” as well as shareholder returns. Prudential

The buyback is just part of the story. Prudential said in April that first-quarter new business profit increased 10% to $686 million. Annual premium equivalent sales were up 6% to $1.82 billion. Wadhwani said the group is still confident it can deliver “double digit growth” in key financial metrics in 2026. Prudential

The insurer is pushing to grow in Asia. In May, it signed a deal to take 75% of Bharti Life Insurance for 3,500 crore rupees, or around $389 million. That gives it control of an Indian life insurer. Wadhwani called India “strategically important and exciting.” Investegate

Prudential’s most direct peers remain AIA Group and Ping An, not the more UK-focused Legal & General or Aviva. Prudential’s growth story depends on Hong Kong, mainland China, ASEAN and India. Reuters reported last week that tighter rules from Beijing on cross-border investments have pressured Hong Kong financial names like AIA, HSBC, Prudential, and Standard Chartered.

The buyback won’t fix everything. If Hong Kong or the mainland recover more slowly, or if weaker currencies and higher energy inflation hit smaller ASEAN markets, or if capital-flow rules get tighter, then the per-share boost from cancellations could fade. Prudential said in April that a few of its smaller ASEAN units faced more risk from higher energy prices driving inflation, which may hurt sentiment and spending.

So far, the stock isn’t moving much. Shares trade near 10 pounds. Investors see the usual scenario—there’s cash coming back, but growth depends on Asia sales, margins and getting the regulatory side right.

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