Pearson (LON:PSON) hits 52-week high after UK regulator skips fine

Pearson (LON:PSON) hits 52-week high after UK regulator skips fine

July 3, 2026

LONDON, July 3, 2026, 00:01 BST

  • Pearson ended Thursday at 1,244p, up 0.65%. The stock hit a 52-week high of 1,254p during the session.
  • Ofqual criticized Pearson Education about the 2025 A Level maths lapses, but did not hand out a fine and said the results remain valid for university use.
  • The shares have gained 4.0% in two sessions since Tuesday’s close. Pearson reported an average buyback price through March of 964p, nearly 29% under Thursday’s close.

Pearson PLC (LON:PSON) finished up Thursday. Britain’s exams regulator gave the company an official warning on the 2025 A Level maths papers, but didn’t fine Pearson and said grades won’t be reviewed.

Pearson closed at 1,244p, up 8p or 0.65%. The stock touched 1,254p during the session, hitting a new 52-week high. Volume came in at 2.36 million. Shares are up 4.0% in two sessions from Tuesday’s 1,196p close, a gain of about 48p ahead of interim results expected at July-end.

Market checkPearson PLCFTSE 100
July 2 close1,244p10,652.9
July 2 moveup 0.65%up 1.7%
Intraday markerhit 1,254p, new 52-week highstrongest close since late April
Two-session Pearson moveup 4.0% since June 30 close

London’s broader market climbed as the FTSE 100 closed at its highest since late April, helped by weaker-than-forecast U.S. jobs numbers easing some rate fears, according to Reuters. Pearson ended behind the index for the day, but the stock’s two-day rally topped what’s typical for the education group.

Pearson Education committed serious errors in both setting and delivering next year’s A Level maths exams for over 75,000 candidates, Ofqual said. The exams regulator said Pearson reused 2022 contingency papers for 2025, making some assessment material “unreasonably similar” to old content. Ofqual also said the replacement second paper was developed separately from the first, leading to weak coverage of some topics. Gov

The market focus wasn’t on the breach itself—which Ofqual labeled serious and avoidable—but on the light sanction. Ofqual said the results remain valid for university and other progression choices, calling any effect on grades “so small as to be statistically insignificant.” Pearson received a rebuke, not a fine, after admitting the issue and working with investigators. Gov

Sir Ian Bauckham, Ofqual chief regulator, called the issues “foreseeable and preventable” and said they led to “anxiety, stress and uncertainty”. Pearson, in comments to FE Week via a spokesperson, admitted it failed to spot and manage all risks around contingency papers and said it has since tightened controls. Gov

Ofqual findingInvestor read-through
Formal rebuke, no fineNo direct cash hit from regulators
Grades trusted for progressionRisk profile better than a fight over valid results
Results impact statistically insignificantBroader claims risk looks low
Rebuke was tied to 2025 papers, not the current exam seriesKeeps this year’s disruption contained

This is a big deal for Pearson, since its testing business relies on trust just as much as on the assessments themselves. A fine wouldn’t be a huge hit for a company valued at around 7.47 billion pounds. But if the results had been ruled unreliable, that would have hurt the brand and risked future deals.

The share price move alters the math for Pearson’s buyback. On May 1, Pearson said it had bought back £219 million of stock at an average price of 964p by March 31 as part of its £350 million program. Thursday’s close was roughly 29% above that average. If the remaining £131 million as of March 31 was spent at 1,244p, it would take out about 10.5 million shares, down from about 13.6 million if bought at 964p.

Pearson indicatorLatest disclosed figureInvestor read-through
Q1 underlying group sales+4%Matches 2026 outlook
Virtual Learning+21%Biggest growth driver in Q1
Assessment & Qualifications-1%Pearson sees a pick-up from Q2
2026 adjusted operating profit guidance640 mln–685 mln poundsStreet is about midway in the range
FY26 adjusted operating profit consensus663 mln poundsImplied P/E is 11.3x at Thursday’s close
Buyback through March 31219 mln pounds at 964p averageStock closed 29% higher Thursday

Pearson’s last trading update did more than just move the stock. Underlying sales climbed 4% in Q1. Virtual Learning jumped 21%. CEO Omar Abbosh called it an “encouraging start to the year”. Assessment & Qualifications fell 1%. Pearson said it expects that unit to pick up from Q2. Pearson plc

VUMA consensus forecasts for Pearson as of June 25 show analysts expect 2026 adjusted operating profit at 663 million pounds. That’s almost exactly at the midpoint of Pearson’s guidance, which ranges from 640 million to 685 million pounds. Pearson is valued at about 11.3 times that 2026 profit target, using Thursday’s market value and excluding debt and other balance sheet items.

Pearson released new research with Amazon.com Inc’s AWS tied to its AI education push. The data showed 80% of U.S. college students use AI tools, but just 23% get hands-on training in real-world settings. Only 12% of employers said U.S. grads are excellent at assessing AI-generated results.

Pearson’s U.S. CEO Art Valentine said, “AI readiness isn’t built by access alone.” That’s the same trust issue flagged in Ofqual’s Thursday criticism. Pearson’s pitch to investors depends on scaling up its sale of verified skills without damaging confidence in its tests and credentials. Pearson plc

Pearson will release its 2026 interim results on July 31. Investors have already bet on a simple resolution to the Ofqual case. Traders will now look for signs that Assessment & Qualifications grew again in Q2, and that the buyback is still boosting per-share numbers with the stock near its 52-week high.

Mateusz Ługowik

Mateusz Ługowik is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Gdańsk, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

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