London, June 19, 2026, 14:07 BST
- Legal & General shares slipped 0.7% to 283.1 pence on Friday, based on delayed market data.
- Bank of England kept rates at 3.75% on a 7–2 split. Two members pushed for a hike to 4%.
- L&G has started the initial £600 million phase of its £1.2 billion buyback, with this part set to finish by September 18.
Legal & General Group Plc shares fell in London on Friday, tracking a move in UK government-bond yields and a murkier outlook on interest rates. The stock traded at 283.1 pence, off 0.72% in the afternoon. There was no new earnings release or trading update. The most recent regulatory filing was a share purchase notice posted June 15.
L&G feels rate moves more than most in the FTSE 100. The group’s three main businesses—institutional retirement, asset management, and retail—keep profits and capital tied to swings in bond prices, savings rates, and how much it costs to provide retirement guarantees. Pension risk transfer, or PRT, is when the insurer takes over pension payments from a corporate plan.
London stocks didn’t move much in the morning session after a 1% drop on Thursday. Gilt yields hit a one-week high as government data said the public sector borrowed £23.3 billion in May, which is £5.6 billion over the Office for Budget Responsibility’s forecast. The larger deficit gave investors another reason to push yields higher.
Bank of England’s rate call was mixed. Two MPC members pushed for a hike now, but Aberdeen deputy chief economist Luke Bartholomew said “conditions don’t seem in place for sustained inflationary pressure.” J O Hambro’s Clive Beagles said “political uncertainty is impacting investor sentiment,” citing higher long-term borrowing costs. Reuters
UK peers traded mixed, with Aviva almost unchanged on delayed data and M&G up about 0.6%. That’s in line with the idea that L&G’s drop didn’t hit every insurer or asset manager.
L&G said its latest operational update is a new three-year technology deal with Microsoft. The group will use Microsoft 365 Copilot for about 10,000 staff and will scale up its Azure cloud usage. “More efficiency and more consistent customer service,” is what chief operating officer Katie Worgan said the effort should bring. L&G hasn’t set any financial goals for the program. Legal & General Group
L&G has been buying back shares and offering the stock some short-term support. Up to June 11, the company bought around 152.9 million shares for £389.6 million, averaging 256.61 pence per share. That’s still less than where the stock closed Friday. Canceling those shares cuts the outstanding total and pushes up per-share figures, all other things unchanged.
L&G’s investment case is still about earnings and capital delivery. The insurer posted 2025 core operating profit up 6% at £1.62 billion. Core operating earnings per share rose 9%, showing ongoing business profit growth. Next, investors will get the half-year numbers on August 5.
But there are risks on both sides. Higher bond yields may help with some new annuity and pension-transfer deals, but big swings in markets can drag down asset values, fee flows, and confidence. L&G finished 2025 with a Solvency II coverage ratio of 203%, down from 232% the year before. Shareholders now have to consider how the company manages buybacks, writes new business, and protects capital.
Right now, the share price action looks like a pause linked to the macro picture, not a shift in how the company is earning. There isn’t any new operating data until August results. Gilt yields, inflation views, and buyback updates are expected to steer trading until then.