Today: 19 May 2026
P&G stock ends 2025 lower as Wall Street slips — what to watch before trading resumes
1 January 2026
2 mins read

P&G stock ends 2025 lower as Wall Street slips — what to watch before trading resumes

NEW YORK, January 1, 2026, 15:03 ET — Market closed.

  • Procter & Gamble shares last closed down 0.5% at $143.31 on Dec. 31.
  • U.S. stock markets are shut on Thursday for New Year’s Day.
  • Investors now turn to Jan. 9 jobs data, Jan. 13 CPI, and P&G’s Jan. 22 earnings call.

Shares of Procter & Gamble (PG) last closed down 0.51% at $143.31 in the final session of 2025, mirroring a broad market slide in holiday-thin trade. U.S. stock markets are closed on Thursday for New Year’s Day.

The consumer-staples bellwether heads into 2026 with investors looking for clarity on demand and pricing power after a choppy year for markets. Attention is also shifting to the company’s next earnings update later this month.

On Dec. 31, Wall Street’s major indexes ended lower as investors took profits with fewer traders at their desks. “it’s perfectly fine in any bull market to have moments of cost,” said Giuseppe Sette, co-founder and president of Reflexivity. Reuters

P&G moved with peers in household and personal care, underscoring the sector’s defensive but rate-sensitive profile. Kimberly-Clark fell about 0.7%, Colgate-Palmolive slipped about 0.6% and Unilever’s U.S.-listed shares eased about 0.3% in the latest session.

Consumer staples are often treated as a refuge because demand for everyday products tends to hold up when growth slows, but the group can lag when investors favor higher-growth themes. That push-and-pull has been a defining feature of the past year’s trading.

P&G enters the new year with a leadership handover that formally takes effect on Jan. 1. Shailesh Jejurikar succeeds Jon Moeller as chief executive, while Moeller becomes executive chairman, the company said.

The stock remains well below its 52-week high of $179.99 and closer to its 52-week low of $138.14, reflecting the pressure on parts of the sector over the past year. P&G traded between $143.23 and $144.14 in the Dec. 31 session.

The next scheduled catalyst is P&G’s fiscal second-quarter earnings conference call on Jan. 22 at 8:30 a.m. ET, according to the company’s investor site.

Traders will focus on organic sales — growth excluding currency swings and acquisitions — to see whether pricing remains the main driver or whether consumers are buying fewer items. Margin commentary will also matter as investors look for any update on costs and promotional intensity.

P&G’s last quarterly update in October kept its fiscal 2026 outlook intact, including a core earnings-per-share range of $6.83 to $7.09. Core earnings back out certain one-time items and are widely used to gauge underlying performance.

Macro data in early January could steer rate expectations and, in turn, sentiment toward dividend-heavy names such as P&G. The U.S. employment report is due Jan. 9 and the consumer price index for December is scheduled for Jan. 13, both at 8:30 a.m. ET, the Labor Department’s calendar shows.

Before trading resumes on Friday, Jan. 2, investors will watch whether P&G holds above Wednesday’s $143.23 session low; a break would leave the stock with less chart support before the $138 area. A rebound would put the mid-$140s back in focus as markets normalize after the holiday break.

Stock Market Today

  • Notable Options Trading Activity in Citigroup, Teladoc, and AutoZone
    May 19, 2026, 4:14 PM EDT. Citigroup Inc (C) experienced notable options trading with 62,734 contracts traded, equating to 6.3 million shares or 57.7% of its average daily volume. The $120 strike put option expiring June 18, 2026, saw high volume with 8,310 contracts. Teladoc Health Inc (TDOC) had 31,614 contracts traded, representing 57.1% of its average daily volume, driven by 14,798 contracts in the $7 strike call option expiring May 22, 2026. AutoZone, Inc. (AZO) registered 1,486 contracts, about 56.3% of average daily volume, with notable activity in the $4200 strike call option expiring July 17, 2026. These figures highlight significant investor interest in these Russell 3000 components ahead of upcoming expiration dates.

Latest articles

Wall Street Just Got Hit by the Bond Market Again — What Traders Are Watching Next

Wall Street Just Got Hit by the Bond Market Again — What Traders Are Watching Next

19 May 2026
The S&P 500 fell 0.55%, Nasdaq lost 0.72%, and Dow dropped 0.47% Tuesday as Treasury yields climbed, with the 10-year at 4.67% and the 30-year at 5.18%, its highest since 2007. Brent crude hovered near $111. Home Depot rose after earnings, while Akamai slid on a $2.6 billion convertible-note offering. Investors watched Nvidia ahead of its results.
Intel Stock Bounces as Wall Street Rethinks AI Narrative

Intel Stock Bounces as Wall Street Rethinks AI Narrative

19 May 2026
Intel shares climbed 3.3% to $111.69 Tuesday afternoon, rebounding after five sessions of losses as Citi and Benchmark raised price targets, citing stronger CPU demand. Trading volume topped 112 million shares. The move came ahead of Nvidia’s earnings, which options traders expect to trigger a major market shift. Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan was set to speak at a J.P. Morgan conference later in the day.
Pinterest shares erase post-earnings gains

Pinterest shares erase post-earnings gains

19 May 2026
Pinterest shares fell about 6% Tuesday, trading at $18.74 by 3:05 p.m. EDT, erasing gains from its May earnings rally. The drop outpaced declines in Meta, Snap, and Reddit as the Nasdaq and S&P 500 also slipped. Pinterest reported Q1 revenue of $1.008 billion, up 18%, with a net loss of $74 million. The company forecast Q2 revenue above analyst expectations.
Gold price forecast for 2026: Banks map a $4,275-$5,000 range after bullion’s blockbuster year
Previous Story

Gold price forecast for 2026: Banks map a $4,275-$5,000 range after bullion’s blockbuster year

ASX 200 forecast for 2026: Rate-hike bets return as strategists split on Australia stocks
Next Story

ASX 200 forecast for 2026: Rate-hike bets return as strategists split on Australia stocks

Go toTop