PepsiCo stock price falls again as market rises; investors eye Feb. 3 earnings next
23 January 2026
2 mins read

PepsiCo stock price falls again as market rises; investors eye Feb. 3 earnings next

New York, January 22, 2026, 21:08 ET — The market has ended trading for the day.

PepsiCo Inc shares slipped 1.6% on Thursday, ending the day at $144.40 and extending losses for a second session, even as the S&P 500 rose. The stock is still about 10% off its 52-week high and traded slightly above its recent average volume. 1

PepsiCo’s sluggish showing grows more significant as a crucial stretch nears. Investors aren’t satisfied with a simple earnings beat or miss—they want detailed updates on pricing, product trims, and margin outlooks. February looms large, hosting two major dates where management is set to reveal hard numbers on the North America reset and plans for capital returns.

PepsiCo said in December it will report its Q4 and full-year 2025 results on Feb. 3, with an investor Q&A session following that morning. The company also laid out an early 2026 forecast, expecting organic revenue growth between 2% and 4%, excluding currency fluctuations and acquisitions, and core EPS growth of roughly 5% to 7%. On top of that, PepsiCo intends to cut about 20% of its U.S. SKUs, or product variants, by early next year. 2

This week, Engie grabbed attention with a fresh sustainability push tied to its global business. On Wednesday, it signed a decade-long contract to deliver biomethane — renewable gas made from organic waste — to PepsiCo UK. Pierre Chambon of Engie called the deal “a model that we would like to replicate in England and other countries.” 3

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, PepsiCo’s CEO Ramon Laguarta urged a rethink on the cost of greener choices. He argued companies shouldn’t pit sustainability against profitability. Rather, the debate should center on short-term expenses versus long-term benefits. 4

Following Procter & Gamble’s quarterly update Thursday, traders are watching demand signals in consumer staples closely. The report pointed to growing pressure on U.S. shoppers in some categories. “The consumer is making choices driven by cost,” Brian Mulberry, senior client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management, told Reuters. 5

Macro events remain in the spotlight. The Federal Reserve will hold its policy meeting on Jan. 27-28. This timing matters for dividend-heavy staples because changes in bond yields influence how investors value steady cash flows. 6

Amid the Davos buzz, markets have swung on tariff news and policy doubts, leaving risk appetite shaky. On Thursday, Reuters highlighted a bounce after Trump backed off on Greenland tariffs, but traders stayed cautious, bracing for fresh shocks. 7

PepsiCo’s immediate test is clear: will targeting lower price points and slimmer shelves drive more frequent purchases without seriously denting margins? If February’s results show weak volume or profits hit by heavy promotions, the stock could stay stuck below last year’s highs.

Coming up, the Fed will announce its rate decision on Jan. 28. PepsiCo is scheduled to release earnings Feb. 3 before the U.S. market opens. The company’s management is also slated to speak at the CAGNY conference on Feb. 18.

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