New York, Feb 8, 2026, 15:49 EST — The session has ended.
- PepsiCo finished Friday at $170.49, gaining 1.77% on the day. Shares climbed roughly 10% over the week.
- Big brand consumer staples are holding steady, even as tech sector swings ripple through broader markets, thanks to a rotation into the sector.
- Focus turns to U.S. jobs numbers and inflation prints this week, with eyes on PepsiCo’s CAGNY presentation Feb. 18 for any new hints about demand.
PepsiCo (PEP.O) wrapped up Friday at $170.49, a gain of 1.77% for the session, putting the stock about 10% above where it finished on Monday. With U.S. markets closed on Sunday, traders will have to wait until the open on Monday for the next update. 1
What’s relevant at this point: the stock now stands as a straightforward way to play the move toward consumer staples—think firms selling daily essentials—while battered tech stocks see outflows. “Rotation is the dominant theme this year,” said Angelo Kourkafas, senior global investment strategist at Edward Jones. 2
This week’s packed macro schedule isn’t just noise for the usual suspects—defensive stocks like PepsiCo can get swept up, too, especially if bond yields lurch on shifting Fed expectations. Markets will get the U.S. jobs numbers Wednesday, Feb. 11, 8:30 a.m. ET, with CPI landing Friday, Feb. 13, also at 8:30 a.m. ET. 3
PepsiCo shares climbed Friday as the Dow notched its first move past 50,000, powered by a sweeping rebound. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rallied alongside. Consumer staples, according to Reuters, surged with the rest of the market to close at an all-time high that day. 4
PepsiCo notched a 1.77% gain during the session, edging past a few other big beverage names. Coca-Cola moved up 0.66%, and Keurig Dr Pepper tacked on 1.43%, according to MarketWatch data. 5
Company news is still reverberating from earlier this week. On Feb. 3, PepsiCo announced plans to slash U.S. prices on major brands like Lay’s and Doritos by as much as 15% following consumer resistance. The company kept its outlook for core earnings-per-share growth at 5% to 7%—that’s profit per share, minus certain items. “They’ve told us they’re feeling the strain,” said Rachel Ferdinando, CEO of PepsiCo Foods U.S. CEO Ramon Laguarta added, “We are betting a lot on portion control.” 6
Income-focused investors took note on Feb. 4 when PepsiCo’s board set a quarterly dividend at $1.4225 per share, set for payout on March 31 to shareholders on record March 6. The company also flagged a 4% bump to its annualized dividend, with the higher payout slated to start with the June 2026 distribution. 7
Demand looks patchy. U.S. consumer sentiment climbed to a six-month high in early February, Reuters noted, but most of that bounce came from wealthier households holding large stock portfolios. “We may have seen the trough in consumer sentiment,” said Oren Klachkin, financial markets economist at Nationwide. Still, survey director Joanne Hsu flagged that concerns over high prices and job security “continue to be widespread.” 8
The risk, though, is clear enough: price cuts boost sales but take a bite out of margins, with retailers still controlling the final sticker. The Wall Street Journal flagged fiercer competition from cheaper store brands, just as snack companies look to bring prices back within reach. 9
PepsiCo has been ramping up its focus on productivity and slashing costs since Elliott, the activist investor, threw its weight behind calls for stronger performance. In its Dec. 8 update, the company outlined a goal: hit a record high for productivity savings by 2026 and deliver core operating margin expansion of at least 100 basis points across the next three fiscal years. (A basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point.) 10
PepsiCo is up next, slated to deliver its update at the Consumer Analyst Group of New York conference on Wednesday, Feb. 18. Coca-Cola and Mondelez are also on the week’s agenda, putting a sharper focus on what’s next for the snack and beverage sector. 11