London, Feb 16, 2026, 09:04 GMT — Regular trading hours
- Schroders edged 0.1% higher in early London trading, staying close to the 586p mark.
- Barclays dropped a fresh takeover-code filing, while RBC’s broker downgrade shifted focus to deal probabilities instead of the numbers.
- The March 12 ex-dividend date is on investors’ radar, along with what happens next in the shareholder approval process.
Schroders (SDR.L) edged up 0.09% to 586.0 pence as of 0904 GMT, barely budging after last week’s takeover deal. The shares hovered in the mid-580s. 1
Schroders shares are acting more like a bet on a buyout than a regular stock move right now. What’s driving the price isn’t the usual market noise—it’s the Nuveen deal. Investors are focused on if it actually happens and just how long they’ll be waiting for their payout.
When these deals surface, traders keep an eye on the “deal spread”—that’s the difference between where shares are trading and the offer price. A big gap? That often hints at regulatory jitters or a drawn-out process. If the spread narrows, it’s a sign the market’s leaning toward the deal getting done.
Nuveen struck a £9.9 billion agreement to acquire Schroders last week, putting £5.90 per share on the table in cash and allowing investors to pocket up to 22 pence in dividends ahead of closure. Schroders CEO Richard Oldfield said the deal would “significantly accelerate our growth plans,” while chair Dame Elizabeth Corley described it as “the right step” for shareholders, clients, and staff. Both firms expect the transaction to close in the fourth quarter of 2026, pending shareholder and regulatory sign-off, and highlighted binding commitments from principal shareholder group trustee companies for around 41% of the shares. 2
Monday brought a takeover-code disclosure that shed some light on trading desk positioning in the stock. Barclays Capital Securities, acting as an exempt principal trader, logged a 1.05% total interest and 0.99% short in Schroders, following trades dated Feb. 13. The desk picked up 12.34 million shares and offloaded 2.30 million, with prices landing between £5.84 and £5.88. Exempt principal traders—usually the market-making units—are required to reveal these stakes once an offer period kicks off. 3
Another broker weighed in too, echoing the view that gains look limited with the current offer on the table. RBC Capital Markets downgraded Schroders to “sector perform” from “outperform.” The team bumped up its target price to 610p, noting that shares are hovering just shy of the 612p-per-share bid. According to RBC’s models, there’s 515p downside if the deal collapses, while the optimistic scenario—assuming a 10% higher counterbid—lands at 670p. Still, they say there’s no evidence of another bidder circling. 4
Dividend schedules are drawing renewed attention. Schroders is set to pay a 15p final dividend, Hargreaves Lansdown data shows, with shares going ex-dividend on March 12 and the payout scheduled for April 23. 5
The agreement is once again putting scale and independence in the spotlight for the industry. Mid-sized active managers across Europe face ongoing strain as low-cost passive funds from giants like BlackRock and Vanguard chip away at business. For some, merging has become the escape hatch. 6
The gap below the bid price shows this deal isn’t a done deal yet. Regulators could drag things out, and when the documents arrive, shareholders might push back—particularly if the stock’s already made most of its run.
Now, attention shifts to upcoming Takeover Code filings and any hints of a rival bid. The next key date: March 12, when Schroders shares lose the right to the 15p final dividend. Investors are also waiting on the official schedule for the shareholder vote.