LONDON, July 7, 2026, 21:02 BST
- Reckitt ended Tuesday’s London trade at 5,206p on the bid and 5,208p on the offer, climbing 2.08%. The FTSE 100 finished up roughly 0.1%.
- The price sits around 7.2% higher than the £48.55 average Reckitt paid in its last buyback tranche. That’s a key level ahead of the half-year update on July 29.
- The company said it could update on the buyback again with HY 2026 results.
- Core Reckitt rose 1.3% like-for-like in Q1, but Europe dropped 4.2% and North America slipped 0.9%, with emerging markets carrying the quarter.
Reckitt Benckiser Group plc LON:RKT climbed on Tuesday, trading above the average repurchase price from the latest part of its £1 billion buyback. With shares up, the next move on capital returns is back on the table ahead of half-year results.
Reckitt finished after hours with a 5,206p bid and a 5,208p offer, up 106p, or 2.08%, according to Hargreaves Lansdown. HL’s page logged the FTSE 100 up 0.13%. Reckitt closed last session at 5,088p, volume came in at 1,060,707 shares, giving a £32.98 billion market cap.
Reckitt’s shares Tuesday traded about 7.2% above the £48.55 average price the company paid in the last part of its buyback, with a 5,206p bid. That spread could be key since company purchases have ended, so it’s down to regular buyers to support the price heading into the July 29 half-year results.
| Market check, Tuesday | Price/level | Day move |
|---|---|---|
| Reckitt Benckiser Group plc LON:RKT | 5,206p bid / 5,208p offer | up 2.08% |
| FTSE 100 | 10,655.88 | up 0.1% |
| Unilever plc LON:ULVR | £46.89 | up 2.90% |
FTSE 100 ended 0.1% higher at 10,655.88, as gains in energy shares followed a better gas outlook from Shell plc LON:SHEL. Unilever plc LON:ULVR rose 2.9% and Diageo plc LON:DGE added 3.5%, giving consumer stocks a lift.
Reckitt said June 16 it finished the third tranche of its ongoing buyback after picking up 11,122,383 shares between March 9 and June 15 at an average price of £48.55. All shares from this tranche are held in treasury, the company said. Reckitt plans another update on any buyback with its HY 2026 results announcement on July 29.
The post-buyback price sets a marker. If Reckitt stays above what the company paid, the rally probably won’t look like just buyback effect. But a drop toward £48.55 could have investors asking management if weaker developed-market sales mean more cash needs to come back to shareholders.
| Reckitt data point | Latest sourced figure | Why investors care |
|---|---|---|
| Final buyback tranche average price | £48.55 | Investors use this as a reference for capital returns |
| Tuesday post-close bid | £52.06 | That’s about 7.2% higher than the last tranche average |
| Shares bought in final tranche | 11.1 million | Reflects recent company buying activity |
| Total voting rights at June 30 | 635.1 million | This figure feeds per-share stats and filings for holders |
Reckitt reported 674,005,752 issued shares in its July 1 voting rights update, with 38,950,759 of those in treasury. The company listed total voting rights at 635,054,993. With shares at a 5,206p bid on Tuesday, that voting rights figure gives an equity value of around £33.1 billion, roughly in line with what Hargreaves Lansdown showed.
Reckitt lists its half-year update for July 29, 0830 BST, on the investor calendar.
Reckitt’s Q1 report in April set an easy benchmark. Core Reckitt grew net revenue 1.3% on a like-for-like basis. Emerging Markets rose 7.6%, but Europe fell 4.2% and North America slipped 0.9%. CEO Kris Licht blamed “very low seasonal incidence, weak categories in Europe and geopolitical disruption” for the Core Reckitt result. The group kept its 2026 Core Reckitt like-for-like revenue target. Investegate
Reckitt missed expectations on like-for-like sales in the last quarter, Reuters reported in April, and the company flagged that first-half margins would drop by around 200 basis points year-on-year. “The results showed broad-based muted growth,” said Harsharan Mann, consumer sector hub lead at Aviva Investors. Reuters listed Aviva as a shareholder in Reckitt. Reuters
The debate over emerging markets versus developed markets remains central for investors. Barclays called emerging markets “doing the heavy lifting for the group” back in March. At the same time, Quilter Cheviot’s Chris Beckett pointed out that gains from the Essential Home divestiture are being eaten up by stranded costs and FX. Reuters