New York, Feb 4, 2026, 21:11 EST — Market closed.
- Procter & Gamble shares rose 1.0% to close at $156.87, edging higher as consumer staples showed resilience amid a choppy U.S. trading day.
- A U.S. filing revealed that P&G executive Ma. Fatima Francisco offloaded 8,000 shares at $158.00 each.
- With the government shutdown pushing back key data, investors are now eyeing Thursday ahead of the rescheduled jobs report set for Feb. 11.
Shares of The Procter & Gamble Company (PG) closed Wednesday up 1.0% at $156.87. Investors turned to defensive stocks following recent swings in high-growth sectors. The stock ranged from $155.38 to $158.37, with roughly 12.2 million shares traded.
Wall Street shifted its focus to cheaper “value” stocks, steering away from growth amid a tech-driven selloff fueled by concerns over AI disruption. “The data … are not too hot, not too cold,” Emily Roland, co-chief investment strategist at Manulife John Hancock Investments, told Reuters. (Reuters)
The shift to a defensive stance is significant, given that key U.S. economic data has been pushed back, forcing traders to adjust their expectations on interest rates. The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced the January employment report will drop next Wednesday, with the January CPI report following on Friday. Meanwhile, the delayed December job openings report is set for Thursday. (Reuters)
In a separate disclosure, a Form 4 filing revealed that Ma. Fatima Francisco, CEO of P&G’s Baby, Feminine & Family Care unit, sold 8,000 shares on Feb. 4 at $158.00 each. Post-sale, she directly held 6,571.1998 shares, plus other indirect stakes. (SEC)
P&G’s rebound Wednesday came after a solid day Tuesday, when shares climbed 1.39% to $155.32 despite a broader market decline. That day, P&G outpaced major consumer rivals like Johnson & Johnson and Colgate-Palmolive, according to MarketWatch. (MarketWatch)
The stock continues to react to P&G’s late-January earnings, which showed a small revenue miss but profits that exceeded expectations, alongside unchanged full-year guidance. “The consumer is making choices driven by cost,” Brian Mulberry, senior client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management, told Reuters back then. (Reuters)
But the setup works both ways. Should the tech sell-off ease and risk appetite rebound, defensive stocks like consumer staples could quickly fall behind — particularly as yields and the dollar shift and investors shift back toward growth.
Investors will be eyeing the company’s upcoming quarterly dividend, set at $1.0568 per share as announced in a January filing, payable on or after Feb. 17. On the wider market front, attention shifts to Thursday’s delayed job openings report, followed by the rescheduled U.S. jobs numbers on Feb. 11. (SEC)