Legal & General (LON:LGEN) close to year high as stock slips with buyback yield near broker targets

Legal & General (LON:LGEN) shares rally, £1.2bn buyback impact clipped

July 4, 2026

LONDON, July 4, 2026, 20:04 BST

  • Legal & General closed Friday at 292.10p, adding 0.24% on the day and posting a 1.81% rise for the week, topping the FTSE 100’s 1.63% weekly move.
  • Legal & General Group’s buyback table puts share repurchases at 157.5 million, with £408.5 million spent and an average price of 257.44p.
  • At the close Friday, the buyback cash left would cover roughly 271 million shares, which is about 36.5 million below the average number bought at past prices, based on company figures and market data done Reuters-style.

With London markets closed Saturday, the most recent price is Friday’s close. Legal & General Group Plc finished at 292.10p, up 0.24%. The FTSE 100 edged up 0.25% to 10,679.03, banking a weekly gain as financials supported the index.

The buyback numbers give a clearer read for investors. L&G has spent 34.0% of its £1.2 billion share repurchase plan, according to the latest table. Shares now sit 13.5% above the programme’s average purchase price. The stock’s move makes the initial buybacks look cheap, but any new buys will cost more and have less impact.

L&G buyback metricLatest reported / calculated figure
Programme size£1.20 bln
Spent so far£408.5 mln
Programme spent34.0%
Shares bought157.5 mln
Average price paid257.44p
Friday close292.10p
Premium of Friday close to average buyback price13.5%
Cash left under programme£791.5 mln
Shares left to buy at Friday close271.0 mln

So far 157.5 million shares have been repurchased, which is 2.84% of the 5.541 billion ordinary shares now in issue after the latest cancellation. If the rest of the £791.5 million in the buyback is used at Friday’s close, the programme would take out about 7.7% of that share count. At the average price paid so far, it would mean removing about 8.4%. The gap—36.5 million shares—equals around 0.66% of the current share base.

L&G’s weekly gain wasn’t the top among London insurers. Aviva Plc added 3.31% in the period, with Prudential Plc (LON:PRU) up 1.89%. L&G still came out ahead of the FTSE 100 by 18 basis points and the FTSE 250 by 12 basis points, comparing Friday’s close to June 26.

Stock / indexFriday closeFriday moveWeek move
Legal & General 292.10pup 0.24%rose 1.81%
Aviva 668.40pgained 0.60%added 3.31%
Prudential (LON:PRU)1,025.50pfell 0.15%was up 1.89%
FTSE 10010,679.03moved 0.25% higherup 1.63%
FTSE 25023,538.80rose 0.52%up 1.69%

Weekly change is based on closing price from June 26.

The stock still looks like an income play. L&G set a 2025 dividend at 21.79p per share, up 2%. Consensus collected by the company in March had analysts looking for 22.22p in 2026. Priced at 292.10p, those dividend numbers put the yield for 2025 around 7.5%, with 2026 seen at roughly 7.6%.

The yield puts focus on the buyback price. L&G’s story depends as much on cash payouts as on profit gains. Back in March, the company said 2025 core operating profit was up 6% to £1.62 billion, with core operating EPS up 9%. Pro forma Solvency II coverage hit 210%. L&G also posted £11.8 billion in global pension risk transfer volumes and £1.2 trillion in asset management AUM.

CEO António Simões told Reuters in March, “In two years, we’ve reshaped the company,” adding that L&G was “very comfortable” with its solvency ratio even after shares fell on results day. The stock has moved back toward AJ Bell’s year high of 302.30p. That squeezes scope for buyback accretion if the company keeps buying at these higher levels. Reuters

L&G’s next scheduled update isn’t coming this week. Its financial calendar lists half-year results for 0700 BST on Aug. 5. Ex-dividend falls on Aug. 20, with a record date on Aug. 21, and payment set for Sept. 25. The next weekly buyback disclosure will show purchases made since June 23-26, when shares mostly traded between 284p and 288p.

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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