Imperial Brands Stock Slips After Major Investor Cuts Stake Below 5% Ahead of Dividend

March 17, 2026
Imperial Brands Stock Slips After Major Investor Cuts Stake Below 5% Ahead of Dividend

LONDON, March 17, 2026, 14:27 GMT

Imperial Brands slipped 0.4% to 3,240 pence as of 1241 GMT Tuesday, following a UK filing that revealed Spring Mountain Investments Ltd trimmed its stake in the tobacco company beneath the 5% threshold. The latest disclosure put Spring Mountain’s voting rights at 4.79779%, down from 5.857089%.

The calendar’s loaded: Imperial moves closer to its March 31 final dividend, with a trading update set for April 14. HL data shows a trailing yield a hair below 5%. With those milestones approaching, any changes in major shareholders stand out more than usual.

Imperial trimmed its share count again, disclosing it bought back 378,901 shares on March 12, followed by another 12,064 on March 13, all under its £1.45 billion buyback program. These shares will be cancelled, dropping the total in circulation to roughly 784.8 million. When a company buys and retires its own stock, as Imperial is doing, it can boost earnings per share over time.

When Imperial posted its full-year numbers in November, the company stuck to its forecast for 3% to 5% operating profit growth through fiscal 2026, banking on stronger tobacco pricing and more demand for vapes, nicotine pouches, and heated tobacco. Tobacco and next-gen products pulled in 4.1% more revenue in 2025. CEO Lukas Paravicini said Imperial would keep pushing its “distinctive challenger approach” as it works through the turnaround. Jefferies, in a note, called the combustibles segment—cigarettes and traditional smoked tobacco—“in good shape,” citing “resilient volumes and continued pricing power.” Reuters

Back in March 2025, Imperial reaffirmed its plan: annual buybacks each year through 2030, sticking to an outlook of up to 3 billion pounds in free cash flow per year. Panmure Liberum’s Rae Maile, commenting then, noted that while some investors had sketched in a bit more growth, his advice was blunt: “Buy the shares before the company can.” Reuters

Imperial isn’t the only one emphasizing cash returns as it ramps up newer nicotine lines. Back in December, British American Tobacco flagged tougher regulations and intense U.S. vape rivalry as headwinds for its 2026 projections. Philip Morris, on the other hand, hiked its 2026 profit forecast in February, betting that nicotine pouches and other smoke-free offerings will keep fueling its momentum.

But Tuesday’s filing left out any explanation for Spring Mountain’s move to cut its stake. Tobacco firms are still tightly bound to regulatory risk, even as they push further into smoke-free products. Just last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared another vape brand—but only the tobacco-flavored version—highlighting persistent caution over new nicotine offerings, particularly those with flavors that tend to attract younger users.

London shares pushed higher, the FTSE 100 climbing 0.6% by 1042 GMT as gains in energy and banking names set the tone. Imperial, trailing behind the index after a weaker showing, has its next slated events: a dividend payout on March 31 and a trading update set for April 14.

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