NEW YORK, January 2, 2026, 04:50 ET
Diageo shares were little changed at about 1,602 pence in early London trade on Friday, keeping the FTSE 100 spirits maker near the bottom of its 52-week range at the start of 2026. The stock, valued at about £35.6 billion, has traded between 1,579 and 2,567.5 pence over the past year and offers a dividend yield of about 5%. Google
The subdued start to the year masks a sharper debate about whether the global spirits group has become a value play after months of disappointing performance. Investors are weighing a steady dividend against concerns that demand for premium alcohol is cooling.
Eight brokerages covering Diageo carry an average “moderate buy” recommendation with a 12-month price target of about 2,199 pence, MarketBeat data showed. A price target is an analyst estimate of where the shares could trade over the next year. MarketBeat
Retail-investor commentary has leaned into the valuation gap in the first days of 2026. A Motley Fool UK column asked whether the “dirt-cheap” Diageo share price could double this year, while also arguing that a smaller move — roughly a third plus dividends — could still deliver solid total returns. The Motley Fool
A separate Yahoo Finance UK piece framed the stock as “crashed” after falling more than a third since the start of last year, and said brokers expect a bounce-back in 2026. Yahoo Finance
Diageo’s new chief executive, Sir Dave Lewis, took over on Jan. 1 after the board appointed the former Tesco boss to lead the group, which owns brands including Johnnie Walker whisky and Guinness beer and is listed in London and New York. “The market faces some headwinds but there are also significant opportunities,” Lewis said in the company’s announcement. www.diageo.com
Diageo has long relied on “premiumisation” — persuading consumers to trade up to higher-priced bottles — to drive profit. A prolonged shift toward cheaper brands would make that harder.
For investors, the question is whether the company can stabilise volumes while protecting pricing, a balance that tends to dictate margins in spirits. Marketing spend and product mix will be early signals.
Competitive pressure remains a backdrop. European rivals such as Pernod Ricard and Campari give investors alternatives in the sector, but Diageo’s breadth across whisky, tequila and beer makes it a bellwether for global spirits demand.