Today: 10 June 2026
P&G Earnings Smash Estimates – Beauty Boom and Razors Fly Off Shelves in Q1

PG Stock Today: What to Know Before the Bell on November 10, 2025 (Earnings, Dividend, Tariffs, and Sector M&A)

Summary (read this first)
• PG closed Friday, November 7 at $146.98, sitting near the low end of its 52‑week range ($144.46–$180.43). Market cap is about $343B.
• P&G’s latest quarter (reported Oct. 24) delivered net sales of $22.4B (+3% y/y), organic sales +2%, and core EPS of $1.99 (+3%). FY26 guidance: all‑in sales +1% to +5%, core EPS $6.83–$7.09; management now bakes in ~$400M after‑tax tariff headwind and ~$100M commodity headwind, offset by an FX tailwind of ~$300M.
• Dividend watch: the next $1.0568 per‑share payout lands Monday, November 17 (ex‑date was Oct. 24). Trailing forward yield is ~2.9% at current prices.
• Leadership transition: COO Shailesh Jejurikar becomes CEO on Jan. 1, 2026; Jon Moeller shifts to executive chairman—operational continuity is expected but investors will listen for transition color.
• Legal overhang to watch: a federal judge just allowed a lawsuit over Kid’s Crest packaging to proceed. While damages, if any, are unclear, headlines can sway sentiment in the near term.
• Sector backdrop: Kimberly‑Clark’s bid to buy Kenvue (Tylenol, Listerine, Neutrogena) for >$40B reshapes staples, with implications for categories where P&G competes (baby care, skin care, oral care).
• Macro this week: October CPI hits Thursday, Nov. 13 (8:30 a.m. ET). Into Monday, the 10‑year Treasury last printed ~4.11% and DXY hovered near 99.6—levels that often influence defensives’ multiples.

Where PG stands into the open
• Last close (Fri, Nov. 7): $146.98 (+0.58% on the day); after‑hours print $147.04. Volume ~8.5M.
• 52‑week range: $144.46–$180.43; market cap ~ $343.45B; forward P/E ~21x—roughly in line with P&G’s post‑pandemic average for a low‑beta defensive.

Earnings check: the latest from Cincinnati
P&G’s fiscal Q1 FY26 (quarter ended Sept. 30) showed steady top‑line progress and disciplined cost control. Net sales rose 3% to $22.4B; organic sales grew 2% (pricing +1%, mix +1%); core EPS was $1.99 (+3%). Management reiterated FY26 guidance, including core EPS of $6.83–$7.09 and organic sales flat to +4%. Notably, the company trimmed its tariff impact outlook to ~$400M after tax (from ~$800M previously) and sees a ~$100M after‑tax commodity headwind, partially offset by a ~$300M FX tailwind. Cash returns remain robust: ~ $10B of dividends and ~ $5B of buybacks targeted for FY26.

Dividend timing and yield
PG remains a dividend bellwether. The next quarterly dividend of $1.0568 per share is payable Monday, Nov. 17 (record/ex‑date was Oct. 24). At Friday’s close, that equates to a forward yield near 2.9%.

Leadership transition—what it means for the stock
On July 28, P&G named COO Shailesh Jejurikar as CEO effective Jan. 1, 2026, with current CEO Jon Moeller becoming executive chairman. P&G historically executes internal successions with minimal disruption; investors will still parse commentary for any tweaks to portfolio priorities, productivity programs, or capital allocation as the hand‑off approaches.

Fresh headlines that could sway sentiment
• Packaging lawsuit proceeds: A U.S. judge allowed a complaint over Kid’s Crest imagery to continue, alleging it could prompt unsafe usage for children. Litigation risk appears modest at this stage, but staples investors tend to be headline‑sensitive.
• Staples consolidation: Kimberly‑Clark’s >$40B agreement to acquire Kenvue broadens a competitor’s scale in health & personal care—areas that overlap with P&G’s oral care/beauty franchises. Watch for read‑through on retail shelf space, promotional intensity, and potential regulatory commentary.

The macro setup for Monday and the week
• Rates & the dollar: The 10‑year Treasury yield is around 4.11%; the U.S. Dollar Index closed near 99.6 on Friday. A softer dollar and stable long rates typically support multinationals’ overseas earnings and defensive sector multiples.
• Data catalyst: October CPI lands Thursday, Nov. 13 (8:30 a.m. ET). Staples often catch a bid if inflation cools and yields ease.
• Sector lens: Consumer‑staples equities have lagged broader markets in 2025; flows can quickly rotate back into defensives when macro risk rises.

Analyst snapshot
Across major houses, PG carries a Buy/Outperform‑tilted consensus with average 12‑month price targets clustered in the high‑$160s to mid‑$170s following the October print (examples: ~$170–$175). Expectations embed low‑single‑digit organic sales growth and modest EPS expansion as tariff pressure moderates.

What I’ll watch at the open

  1. Tape action vs. yields: If the 10‑year holds ~4.1% or drifts lower, PG’s multiple support tends to improve. A push back above ~4.3% would likely lean the other way for defensives.
  2. Staples read‑through: Any incremental chatter on the Kimberly‑Clark/Kenvue deal (regulatory, synergies, or category commentary) could change sentiment for PG, especially in oral care and beauty.
  3. Dividend approach: With the Nov. 17 payment date a week out, income accounts often fine‑tune positions—one reason PG can see modest bid support into the payout.
  4. Litigation noise: Any follow‑ups to the Kid’s Crest ruling (copycat suits, AG statements) could create short‑term volatility, though materiality looks limited today.

Bottom line
Into Monday, November 10, 2025, PG enters the week as a high‑quality defensive near the bottom of its 52‑week range, with a clear dividend catalyst (Nov. 17), stable FY26 guidance, and identifiable headwinds (tariffs/commodities) that management already quantified. Macro drivers (CPI on Nov. 13, rates, and the dollar) plus sector M&A headlines are likely to matter more for early‑week direction than company‑specific news. For long‑term investors, the setup still leans on P&G’s execution, cash returns, and category leadership; for short‑term traders, watch the 10‑year and staples‑wide flows for cues.

Disclosure: This article is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice. Always do your own research or consult a licensed financial advisor.

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