London, May 19, 2026, 09:05 BST
Rolls-Royce shares rose in early London trading on Tuesday, outpacing the wider market as investors bought back into one of the FTSE 100’s more crowded industrial comeback trades.
The stock was up 2.2% at 1,183.2 pence, 25.6p above Monday’s close, after trading between 1,154.6p and 1,186p. It remained below its 52-week high of 1,420p. Investing
That matters now because Rolls-Royce has become a shorthand trade for long-haul aviation demand, defence spending and cash returns. The FTSE 100, the main index of large London-listed companies, was also higher, with European markets firmer and oil lower after reports that U.S. President Donald Trump stood down an Iran strike. Investing
Trading was under way in London. The London Stock Exchange’s normal weekday session runs from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. local time, and its next scheduled 2026 holiday is May 25, so Tuesday was not a holiday or weekend recap. TradingHours
The UK backdrop was less clean. Employers cut payrolls by 100,000 in April, vacancies fell to their lowest level since early 2021 and unemployment edged up to 5.0%, while Jack Kennedy, senior economist at jobs platform Indeed, said “the latest figures point to a labour market feeling the strain.” Reuters
For Rolls-Royce, the immediate investor focus is still flying hours. Airlines pay the group under long-term service agreements, maintenance contracts linked to how much engines are used, and Rolls said in late April that Middle East airline engine flying hours were recovering after war disruption. Chief Executive Tufan Erginbilgic said then: “We expect to fully mitigate the current financial impact of the disruption to our business.” Reuters
Jefferies analyst Chloe Lemarie described that April statement as “reassuring”, pointing to the resilience of the group’s long-term service agreement model despite uncertainty around air traffic and the Middle East. She also noted management’s phrase “further confidence” in guidance, wording she said Rolls had used before forecast upgrades at interim results. Proactiveinvestors UK
Analyst expectations remain high. Rolls-Royce’s own April consensus, based on 12 analyst submissions, put 2026 underlying EBIT, a measure of operating profit before interest and tax, at 4.13 billion pounds and free cash flow, cash left after running and investing in the business, at 3.73 billion pounds. Rolls-Royce
Buybacks are another support. In February, Rolls-Royce said it would buy back 7 billion to 9 billion pounds of shares from 2026 to 2028, a buyback being a company purchase of its own stock, and Reuters reported that its margin targets brought it closer to GE Aerospace, its main widebody engine rival. Richard Hunter at Interactive Investor called the results “sparkling” but said the group still had “unfulfilled ambitions to maintain the momentum.” Reuters
But the downside is not small. Berenberg said the shares traded at 31 times expected 2027 earnings, a price-to-earnings ratio that compares the share price with profit per share, and at a 4.4% free cash flow yield, leaving “limited scope for a further re-rating.” A weaker air-traffic recovery, fresh Middle East disruption or slower cash delivery would test that valuation quickly. Halifax
The next scheduled company test is July 30, when Rolls-Royce is due to publish 2026 half-year results. Until then, the stock is likely to trade on engine-hour data, buyback progress and whether investors still believe the turnaround can keep outrunning the wider UK economy. Rolls-Royce