London, February 20, 2026, 12:02 GMT — Regular session
- Diageo shares climbed roughly 3% following a report that CEO Dave Lewis is eyeing a shakeup of the company’s senior leadership team.
- Attention shifts to Lewis as he delivers his first interim results briefing on Feb. 25, with investors watching closely for clues on costs and structure.
- Investors are eyeing potential gains from a quicker reset, but they’re also factoring in the risks of disruption and the challenging U.S. trading environment.
Shares of Diageo climbed roughly 3.2% Friday, following reports that recently appointed chief executive Dave Lewis plans to overhaul the company’s top management. The stock hovered near 1,837.9 pence, up from Thursday’s close at 1,781.5 pence, swinging between 1,794.5 and 1,839.5 pence during the session. (Investing.com)
This is a critical moment for Lewis, who’s only just getting settled in the role. Investors are looking for more than just talk—they want to see that the world’s biggest spirits maker is shifting from diagnosing problems to actually fixing them. Diageo’s recovery has stumbled, with softer consumer demand in important markets and persistent cost pressures testing shareholders’ nerves.
There’s not much room left on the clock. Diageo will release its interim results for the six months ending Dec. 31, 2025, on Feb. 25. Investors will be watching for any sharper turn in management’s stance on costs, portfolio moves and where it puts its money this year. (www.diageo.com)
Lewis is pushing for “wholesale change” at Diageo, the Financial Times reported, with plans to swap out multiple members of the 14-person executive committee and cut management layers. Diageo declined to comment, according to Reuters. (Reuters)
Lewis, who joined from Tesco and is known for slashing costs and streamlining big operations, has faced no letup in challenges. Reuters pointed out that Diageo is contending with higher U.S. tariffs in its largest market.
The Financial Times reported efforts to shake up what a company insider termed a “fat and happy” culture, as Diageo works with leverage sitting at 3.4 times adjusted earnings in June 2025—still above its own goal of under three times. The company has been shedding assets, with one move involving a $2.3 billion sale of its Kenyan brewer EABL stake to Asahi. There’s also been a look at possible asset sales in both China and India. (Financial Times)
Some investors have their eyes on retention. “We would love to see Nik stay on board,” said Kai Lehmann, an analyst at Diageo shareholder Flossbach von Storch, in comments to the Financial Times, pointing to finance chief Nik Jhangiani.
Some want to see cash allocated differently. Julien Albertini, portfolio manager at First Eagle Investments, told the FT the company ought to put money back into “walking dollars”—the sales reps out in the field—after earlier cuts.
The outlook is still uneven. According to NielsenIQ data reported by the FT, U.S. sales for Casamigos tequila dropped 11.5% in January compared to a year earlier—a clear signal that even higher-end spirits feel the pinch when shoppers opt for cheaper options.
Still, speeding up the reset isn’t without danger. Shuffling management can pull focus from the core business, and slashing costs can cut too deep in spirits, especially if it eats into marketing or sales teams. According to the FT, Jefferies analysts figure that chopping the dividend in half might get leverage back on target by the end of 2027 — though that sort of move would almost certainly put pressure on income investors.
Feb. 25 is circled on investor calendars for Lewis’s debut detailed update as CEO. There’s a webcast set for 07:05 UK time, then a Q&A call at 09:30, with markets eyeing any fresh signals on U.S. demand, tariffs, and debt reduction progress. (www.diageo.com)