London, June 16, 2026, 12:05 BST
- Experian added 18p at 2,580p/2,581p, up 0.70%. The FTSE 100 was higher too.
- The company said it bought back 464,393 shares for cancellation on June 15.
- Experian plans to release its Q1 FY27 trading update July 16. Investors have their eyes on the date.
Experian PLC shares moved higher in London on Tuesday, with the FTSE 100 up as well. The stock traded at 2,580p to sell and 2,581p to buy, up 18p or 0.70%, according to Hargreaves Lansdown. The FTSE 100 rose 0.53%. Experian opened at 2,570p after closing at 2,563p on Monday. Investors kept an eye on the company’s share buyback. HL
Experian bought 464,393 ordinary shares on June 15, with trades handled by J.P. Morgan Securities on the London Stock Exchange. Prices ranged between 2,545p and 2,638p. The average price was 2,578.9779p. Experian plans to cancel these shares. The company said this was part of its ongoing share buyback and not a trading update. Canceling shares reduces the total in the market and can lift earnings per share. Investegate
That’s put a floor under the stock, but investors remain cautious this year. Experian showed solid numbers in May: ongoing Benchmark revenue added 13% to $8.43 billion, organic growth reached 8%, and Benchmark EBIT gained 15% to $2.41 billion. Benchmark EPS, or adjusted earnings-per-share, was up 15% to 179.8 cents. CEO Brian Cassin called FY26 “a record year for Experian.” The board also approved a new $1 billion share buyback. Experian
Experian set new FY27 guidance, targeting organic revenue growth between 6% and 8%, and total revenue up by 8% to 11%. Benchmark EPS is expected to post another double-digit rise. Organic revenue reflects constant currency growth from the core business. Reuters reported the organic growth target was a touch below what analysts had forecast. The stock dropped as much as 7.1% after the update. Investors are weighing economic uncertainty, interest rates, and more caution among credit card holders. CEO Cassin told analysts, “We don’t see any material improvements; we don’t see any material deterioration either.” Reuters
Experian is still pitching its strengths in credit data, fraud checks and analytics, still buying back shares, and management keeps repeating the message on rising margins and double-digit adjusted EPS growth. But bears aren’t leaving. Lending demand is soft, clients are cautious, geopolitics is shaky, and there are investor worries about AI risk in Experian’s data-analysis business. JPMorgan’s Jane Sparrow told Reuters she thinks Experian will keep talking up AI benefits next quarters. Reuters
Experian shares are trading at what looks like a fair price now, not much of a bargain. Hargreaves Lansdown’s latest data shows a market cap around £23.04 billion, P/E of 18.22, and a 2.00% dividend yield. That P/E is versus earnings per share. Investors are waiting for the first-quarter FY27 trading update on July 16. The company aims to keep organic growth in line with its guidance. A strong update could keep the rebound on track, but soft numbers—especially out of North America or signs of falling credit-card demand—might hit the shares even as the buyback continues. HL