Unilever share price ticks up as Deutsche Bank turns cautious before results
10 February 2026
1 min read

Unilever share price ticks up as Deutsche Bank turns cautious before results

London, Feb 10, 2026, 08:50 GMT — Regular session

  • Unilever edged up roughly 0.2% in early London action, recovering a bit from Monday’s 1.6% slide.
  • Deutsche Bank downgraded the stock to “hold,” citing valuation concerns following a sharp rally.
  • Unilever’s full-year results land Feb. 12, and investors are already making their moves.

Unilever edged up 0.2% to 5,176 pence in early Tuesday trading in London by 0835 GMT, recovering a bit after dropping 1.6% the day before. 1

Shares barely budged, with the stock stuck—propped up by defensive buying, but also hampered by doubts over whether recent gains have already priced in the good news. Europe’s STOXX 600 went nowhere, as investors picked through uneven earnings reports and looked ahead to major U.S. data due later this week. 2

Unilever stands out among FTSE 100 giants, a classic “staples” pick as investors look for defensive names when growth jitters flare. On Monday, the FTSE 100 inched up 0.16%, hovering close to all-time highs, despite some heavyweight stocks slipping. 3

Deutsche Bank downgraded Unilever to “hold” from “buy” but left its 5,150 pence target unchanged, analyst Tom Sykes wrote after shares climbed past that mark. Sykes pointed to the stock’s roughly 19 times forward earnings multiple—a premium over the broader market. “The valuation no longer supports a ‘buy’ recommendation,” he said. 4

Timing is critical here. With Unilever’s results just around the corner, even a minor change in how management discusses margins or volumes tends to jolt the stock. Investors, for now, don’t have much fresh data to go on.

Unilever, which produces Dove soap and Hellmann’s mayonnaise, plans to release its Q4 and full-year 2025 results on Feb. 12. The company will hold a webcast at 0800 UK time. 5

Traders are watching for tweaks in the company’s outlook—particularly any hints about how shoppers are reacting to higher prices and if volumes are starting to steady. Usual checkpoints: costs, marketing budgets, and how much cash is heading back to shareholders.

Valuation comes down to comparisons. Unilever ends up measured against big European consumer names like Nestlé and Reckitt Benckiser. Even a slight edge in growth or margins can swing the “defensive” vote from one to the other.

The risk is clear enough: miss on results or guidance, and that premium multiple could shrink in a hurry. Any early gains might disappear just as fast. A weak showing in broader European equities would only add to the pressure.

Following the Feb. 12 results, attention shifts to the CAGNY Conference slated for Feb. 17. Investors will be tuning in, looking for more detail on demand trends and outlook for the year. 6

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