London Stock Exchange Group Stock: Why LSEG’s Record Quarter Faces A Tuesday Test

May 4, 2026
London Stock Exchange Group Stock: Why LSEG’s Record Quarter Faces A Tuesday Test

London, May 4, 2026, 19:59 BST

London Stock Exchange Group plc will be back in focus Tuesday, as investors look to see how its shares trade after the cash market missed a session Monday thanks to the Early May Bank Holiday closure.

The exchange flagged May 4 as a non-trading day for on-exchange activity, keeping just OTC/SI off-book trade reporting open. OTC/SI covers trades logged outside the main order book. London Stock Exchange

Why it matters now: LSEG finished May 1 at 9,624 pence, rising 0.77%. That price will greet investors returning from the long weekend. Yahoo Finance

But the real question is how they’re interpreting the volatility now. U.S. equity fund inflows dropped to $911 million for the week ending April 29, Reuters reported Monday, pulling data from LSEG Lipper. That’s the weakest net buying since March 18. Bond funds, on the other hand, brought in $4.87 billion. Reuters

LSEG reported a 9.8% jump in first-quarter total income excluding recoveries, calculated on an organic constant-currency basis—that figure adjusts for both currency swings and any portfolio changes. Markets revenue climbed 15.5%, while Data & Analytics posted a 5.1% increase. More than 150 customers have either linked up to or are in the process of joining its Model Context Protocol server, which allows AI tools to tap into external data sources. The group also repurchased £1.1 billion in shares during the quarter. LSEG

Still, bearish worries linger. According to Reuters, Elliott Management has pushed LSEG to shake up its portfolio and boost margins. Investors are hashing out whether AI poses a threat to parts of the company’s data business. Will Howlett, financials analyst at Quilter Cheviot, put it this way: the first-quarter beat “should help ease concerns around the durability of growth.” Reuters

Right before the holiday, a fresh filing landed with a technical adjustment for shareholders. LSEG’s count stood at 514,674,092 ordinary shares as of April 30, with 21,451,599 tucked into treasury. That leaves 493,222,493 voting rights on the table for investors working out their UK disclosure thresholds. Stockopedia

LSEG’s fund-data unit remained front and center on Monday. Detlef Glow at LSEG Lipper highlighted that Europe’s 10 largest ETF classifications make up $2.03 trillion—66.26% of the continent’s ETF assets—while the top 10 in the U.S. hold $10.47 trillion, or 76.72%. According to Glow, the U.S. figures point to a “home bias of U.S. ETF investors.” Lipper Alpha Insight

This isn’t all about LSEG, either. Intercontinental Exchange outpaced first-quarter profit forecasts, riding a wave of strong trading, while Cboe set a new high for index-options volume and rolled out cost-cutting plans following its strategic review. Market volatility is giving a lift to exchange and derivatives groups, even as they clamp down on expenses. Reuters

LSEG faces a focused test on Tuesday—will its AI-driven data distribution, clearing and trading businesses, plus the buyback, give investors enough confidence to balance out concerns around its data pricing and activist scrutiny?

If volatility cools down, the narrative shifts quickly. Spikes in trading activity don’t always stick around, and the company faces a test: proving AI can boost distribution of its data, rather than undercutting the fee structure that turned the Refinitiv acquisition into such a pivotal move.

Stock Market Today

  • Swatch CEO Defends Audemars Piguet Collaboration Launch Amid Global Disruptions
    May 19, 2026, 9:57 AM EDT. Swatch CEO Nick Hayek Jr defended the chaotic launch of the Royal Pop pocket watch, a collaboration with luxury brand Audemars Piguet, which sparked large crowds and store closures globally. Priced from £335, the watch blends Swatch's pop-art style with Audemars Piguet's iconic design, significantly cheaper than usual luxury prices. Hayek called the overcrowding "good news" and confirmed ongoing production. Safety concerns forced closures at several UK stores including Liverpool and London, with police involvement in some locations. Only 20 of 220 stores worldwide were affected. Experts attribute the frenzy to social media-driven hype and exclusivity appealing to younger consumers. Resale at inflated prices mirrors trends common in the luxury market.