New York, Jan 21, 2026, 08:04 EST — Premarket
- Shares slipped 0.5% in premarket action following a 4.5% surge the day before
- The brewer held up better than the wider U.S. selloff on Tuesday, as other alcohol stocks also gained ground
- Investors are digesting demand from core Hispanic beer consumers, the impact of tariff-related packaging expenses, and the upcoming dividend record date on Jan. 29
Constellation Brands shares slipped roughly 0.5% to $162.87 in premarket action Wednesday, following a 4.47% gain that pushed the stock to $163.64 at Tuesday’s close. (Investing)
The move may seem small, but it keeps the stock under the spotlight following a rare strong session. Traders remain uncertain about what “normal” beer demand will look like after a volatile period in late 2025 and early 2026.
Constellation’s beer segment stands out in a sluggish U.S. alcohol market and ranks among the major consumer players linked to Hispanic spending trends. That group, however, has felt the impact of fluctuating jobs, prices, and ongoing policy uncertainty.
Tuesday saw Constellation’s shares jump 4.47%, defying the S&P 500’s 2.06% drop, with trading volume surging past recent levels. Brown-Forman’s stock also climbed, while Molson Coors wrapped the day mixed. (MarketWatch)
Constellation beat third-quarter profit and sales estimates earlier this month but lowered its full-year earnings per share forecast to a range of $9.72 to $10.02, down from $9.86 to $10.16. The company confirmed an expected 4% to 6% organic net sales decline for the fiscal year ending Feb. 28, excluding acquisition and currency impacts. It also highlighted tariff pressures on the aluminum used in its beer packaging. (Reuters)
The company reported a 3% drop in beer depletions—the pace at which products move through to retailers—in the quarter, alongside a 2.2% decline in beer shipments. CEO Bill Newlands described the third-quarter landscape as “remained challenged.” CFO Garth Hankinson highlighted capital returns, noting, “we returned nearly $1.4 billion to shareholders.” (Cloudfront)
On the post-earnings call, Newlands pointed to pressure coming from core shoppers: “The beer category overall still remains challenged, and it’s largely around the Hispanic consumers,” he said. Morningstar analyst Dan Su noted the 2026 FIFA World Cup could boost demand, as it tends to over-index in Hispanic communities and social settings where beer is popular. (Reuters)
Constellation’s board has set a quarterly cash dividend of $1.02 per share for its Class A stock. The payout will be made on Feb. 12 to shareholders registered by Jan. 29, according to a filing. (Constellation Brands, Inc.)
The trade remains fragile. Should beer volumes slip once more, or if packaging and other expenses surge beyond what pricing can absorb, the stock’s recent bounce could vanish fast—especially with investors skittish over consumer spending.
Traders on Wednesday will be tracking if the stock can maintain Tuesday’s gains when cash trading kicks off, and if alcohol stocks continue showing pockets of strength. The next key date is Jan. 29, the record date for Constellation’s dividend.