P&G stock slips on the year-end close — what to watch before Procter & Gamble’s Jan. 22 earnings

P&G stock slips on the year-end close — what to watch before Procter & Gamble’s Jan. 22 earnings

NEW YORK, December 31, 2025, 20:21 ET — Market closed

  • Procter & Gamble (PG) fell 0.5% to $143.31 in the final U.S. trading session of 2025.
  • The S&P 500 ended down 0.74% in thin, holiday-shortened trade, keeping pressure on defensives. Reuters
  • Next up: a CEO change on Jan. 1 and the company’s Jan. 22 earnings report and webcast. Reuters+2Procter & Gamble+2

Procter & Gamble shares ended down 0.5% at $143.31 on Wednesday, a subdued finish to the final trading session of 2025 as U.S. stocks drifted lower in holiday-thin trade. Reuters

The move matters now because P&G is a heavyweight consumer-staples bellwether that many investors use as a defensive holding when markets turn choppy. U.S. markets are closed on Thursday for New Year’s Day, leaving Friday’s open as the next near-term sentiment check. Reuters

The S&P 500 fell 0.74% to 6,845.50, the Dow dropped 0.63% to 48,063.29 and the Nasdaq slid 0.76%, Reuters reported. The market’s four-session slide also defied the so-called “Santa Claus rally,” the seasonal stretch when stocks often rise in late December and early January. Reuters

“It’s perfectly fine in any bull market to have moments of cost,” said Giuseppe Sette, co-founder and president of Reflexivity, pointing to profit-taking when liquidity is low. Reuters

P&G traded between $143.24 and $144.30 and saw about 5.3 million shares change hands, according to market data.

Other household and personal-products names were mixed: Kimberly-Clark fell 0.7%, Colgate-Palmolive slipped 0.6% and Church & Dwight lost 0.7%, while Clorox edged up.

With no fresh company announcement setting the tone in the session, P&G largely moved with the broader tape and year-end positioning. Thin liquidity can exaggerate otherwise modest swings, especially in defensive names that see less speculative trading than high-growth stocks.

The next hard company catalyst is Jan. 22, when P&G said it will webcast a discussion of its quarterly results beginning at 8:30 a.m. ET. Nasdaq’s earnings calendar also lists the report for that morning, before the regular session opens. Procter & Gamble+1

Investors will be listening for updates on volumes and pricing — essentially, whether shoppers keep buying the same number of products as price tags shift. Guidance on promotions and input costs will also set expectations for margins into 2026.

Leadership is also in focus heading into the new year. P&G has said Chief Operating Officer Shailesh Jejurikar is set to become CEO on Jan. 1, with Jon Moeller moving to executive chairman. Reuters

That transition adds weight to the January call as an early stage-setter for priorities on growth, costs and capital returns. For long-only investors, tone can matter nearly as much as the numbers when a new CEO steps into the top job.

Before the next session: U.S. markets reopen on Friday, Jan. 2, after the New Year’s Day holiday. Early-January economic data can quickly shift interest-rate expectations, which tends to ripple into consumer-staples valuations. Reuters

The Labor Department is scheduled to publish the December employment report on Jan. 9, while the consumer price index for December is due Jan. 13, according to the agency’s calendar. Bureau of Labor Statistics

For P&G, chart watchers are likely to treat Wednesday’s $143.24 low as near-term “support” — a level where buyers have recently stepped in — and $144.30 as an initial “resistance” level where sellers emerged.

Shares resume trading Friday with investors weighing a muted year-end close against the countdown to Jan. 22 results and the company’s first update under a new CEO. Procter & Gamble+1

Stock Market Today

  • Market breadth expands in MarketSmith India; cyclicals lead as IT slips
    December 31, 2025, 8:15 PM EST. Market breadth was decisively positive, with 2,222 stocks advancing and 936 declines, underscoring a broad appetite for risk. Sector leadership came from Oil and Gas, Consumer Durables, Media, Metals and Auto, reflecting sustained demand for cyclical and consumption-linked themes. The Financials space supported the mood, led by private banks and diversified financial services. FMCG and Pharma closed higher as well. The sole laggard was IT, ending marginally in the red amid selective profit-taking. Participation remained broad, with strength concentrated in cyclicals and defensive plays.
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