Today: 4 March 2026
Unilever share price edges up in London as oil shock rattles markets — what’s next for ULVR
4 March 2026
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Unilever share price edges up in London as oil shock rattles markets — what’s next for ULVR

London, March 4, 2026, 09:09 GMT — Regular session

Unilever PLC edged up 0.2% to 5,146 pence as of 0900 GMT on Wednesday, bouncing back a bit after UK equities stumbled in the previous session. Shares have ranged from 5,134 to 5,168 pence since the open. London South East

European stocks attempted to stabilize, with the STOXX 600 gaining 0.6% as of 0810 GMT after a global sell-off sparked by escalating tensions in the Middle East. Brent crude climbed close to 2%, although it remained below its latest peaks. Reuters

Britain’s FTSE 100 dropped 2.8% and the FTSE 250 lost 3.1% the previous day, hit by a spike in energy prices and a pullback in expectations for Bank of England rate cuts. “If higher energy prices squeeze real incomes and prevent the Bank from cutting rates, hopes would be dashed for a growth pick-up,” said David Rees, head of global economics at Schroders. Reuters

Unilever’s most recent regulatory filing put Prakash Kakkad in the chief legal officer and group company secretary roles, effective March 1. He takes over from Maria Varsellona, and according to the filing, Kakkad will join the Unilever Leadership Executive as well. SEC

Unilever’s latest filing listed 2,184,948,966 voting rights as of Feb. 27—this is the number investors look at when figuring out if they need to flag a shift in their stakes under UK regulations. The total count of ordinary shares stood at 2,185,205,247, according to the company, though that figure doesn’t include a small batch held inside the group that can’t cast votes. London South East

No trading statement accompanied either update, so the stock tracked broader market moves. Right now, it’s mostly about oil, inflation bets, and how fast the buzz about rate cuts disappears.

Still, higher energy costs don’t spare the consumer staples sector—transportation and packaging get pricier, suppliers push through hikes, and household budgets in major developed markets feel the pinch. If the conflict drags on, there’s more risk: supply-chain snarls could flare up again, and currencies may swing more violently.

Unilever’s next key event lands April 30, when it reports its first-quarter trading update. The company’s investor calendar also lists a dividend payout set for April 10. Unilever

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