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This Week's Bonus Article 3 Stocks Sending a Strong Signal With Massive BuybacksReported by Leo Miller. First Published: 3/9/2026. 
Key Points- Cheniere, Fair Isaac, and Zillow all expanded buyback authorizations, signaling confidence and a stronger commitment to capital returns.
- Cheniere stands out for the sheer scope and duration of its repurchase capacity, giving it unusually large flexibility to shrink the share count over time.
- Fair Isaac is leaning on buybacks as shares digest policy-related headlines, while Zillow is using repurchases to capitalize on a depressed share price amid housing and regulatory uncertainty.
- Special Report: As 2026 Approaches — Private Deals Are Heating Up

Three key stocks in leading positions across their industries just announced substantial buyback programs. One energy name now has repurchase capacity nearing 20% of its market capitalization, giving it significant flexibility to return capital to shareholders. That company, along with two others, is signaling strong confidence through these latest buyback announcements. LNG Plans +$10 Billion in Buybacks Through 2030Cheniere Energy (NYSE: LNG) is one of the world's largest exporters of liquefied natural gas. The company acts as an intermediary, taking natural gas from producers, liquefying it, and then finding buyers. Liquefied natural gas is a key and growing part of the global natural gas market. Liquefaction enables transportation of the gas on ships or trucks, rather than by pipeline, so buyers and sellers can connect even if they are on opposite sides of the world. The Iran war just opened up the biggest opportunity to invest in gold since 2023, and there's a new way for ordinary investors to buy gold with the click of a button and pay zero storage fees—but I do not recommend this revolutionary new gold investment because there's a better way to own gold. Right now, four tiny gold stocks are trading at discounts as deep as 96% and could hand you potential gains of 10X or more—to double your money in gold, the gold price has to rise by another $5,000 per ounce, but these four undervalued stocks only need to rise to the fair value of the gold they already hold as proven reserves for you to potentially 10X your stake. Right now, they're still selling at discounts of between 59% and 96%. See my top four picks for the coming gold mania S&P Global notes that liquefied natural gas imports to Europe surged 30% year-over-year (YOY) in 2025, with the United States supplying over 77% of those imports. Over the past five years, Cheniere Energy shares have benefited from strong demand, rising more than 250%. The energy stock fell significantly in the second half of 2025 but has rebounded strongly in 2026 and is now near its all-time high. Demonstrating conviction in its outlook, Cheniere bought back $2.7 billion of shares over the last 12 months (LTM), its largest total ever. The company plans to continue buying back shares at a strong pace and recently boosted its buyback capacity to $10.2 billion — roughly 20% of the firm's market cap (about $52 billion). The firm called the move a "clear mark of confidence" and said it gives Cheniere the ability to materially reduce its outstanding share count through 2030. FICO: Financials and Buybacks Are Up as Shares FallFair Isaac (NYSE: FICO) is the United States' most dominant player when it comes to consumer credit scores. The company's FICO Score is often used as the de facto metric for assessing risk when financial institutions provide many types of loans, from mortgages to credit cards. The market has hit FICO shares fairly hard over the past year; the stock is down about 30% from its 52-week high reached in May 2025. A large part of the stock's decline was due to changes at the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). FHFA Director Bill Pulte criticized the company's price increases for mortgage application credit scores, which weighed on the shares. The FHFA then removed the requirement that loans purchased by Freddie Mac (OTCMKTS: FMCC) and Fannie Mae (OTCMKTS: FNMA) use the FICO score, a move that undercut Fair Isaac's dominance in that space. Despite these headwinds, Fair Isaac has maintained solid growth and improved profitability. Revenue has risen by 13% or more YOY in each of the last four quarters, and the company's adjusted operating margin climbed by more than 300 basis points in fiscal 2025. With its shares down, Fair Isaac is demonstrating confidence by substantially increasing buybacks. The firm spent more than $1.5 billion on repurchases in the last 12 months, near its highest five-year level. The company recently announced a $1.5 billion buyback authorization, equal to roughly 4.3% of its approximately $35 billion market capitalization, giving it considerable ability to repurchase shares at prices it likely views as attractive. Zillow's Buyback Capacity Exceeds 10% With Shares Down BigNext up is Zillow Group (NASDAQ: ZG), known for its leading platform that connects home buyers and renters with sellers and landlords. Zillow shares have been hit hard in the past six months, falling more than 45% from their 52-week high. A variety of factors contributed to Zillow's weakness, including a soft housing market and an ongoing investigation by the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC alleges that Zillow and Redfin illegally stifled competition after Zillow paid Redfin $100 million to re-host its rental listings, which made many of the two companies' listings identical. While the FTC argues this was anti-competitive, Redfin contends the deal was necessary because the lack of paid independent listings had made operating its sales force uneconomical. Still, Zillow maintained solid revenue growth of 15% in 2025 and saw operating margins improve significantly. Indicating strength, Zillow has ramped up buyback spending in 2026: it repurchased $626 million of shares through early March, nearly matching the $670 million repurchased in all of 2025. Zillow has replenished its buyback capacity, boosting repurchase authorization to $1.3 billion — more than 11% of its roughly $11 billion market capitalization. That gives the company flexibility to repurchase shares at scale. Management noted on its February earnings call that it was taking advantage of the "recent market dislocation to buy back shares at what we believe is an attractive price." Zillow Stands Out for Its Upside PotentialOverall, these three companies' buyback announcements send a clear, positive signal to investors. Among them, Wall Street analysts see the most upside potential in Zillow. The MarketBeat consensus 12-month price target near $78 implies upside of about 66%, although price targets were revised down materially after the company's most recent earnings report. |
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