Today: 13 May 2026
Zoetis Stock Tumbles After Guidance Cut as Pet Owners Push Back on Vet Costs
7 May 2026
2 mins read

Zoetis Stock Tumbles After Guidance Cut as Pet Owners Push Back on Vet Costs

NEW YORK, May 7, 2026, 14:09 (EDT)

  • Zoetis dropped roughly 20%, slipping after the company trimmed its 2026 outlook and came up short on Q1 expectations from Wall Street.
  • U.S. companion-animal sales fell 11%, exposing a soft patch in what investors once considered a reliably sturdy business.
  • Management pointed to a drop in vet visits, sharper pricing pressures, and stiffer competition in the pet medicine market.

Shares of Zoetis Inc. dropped roughly 20% Thursday after the animal-health firm trimmed its full-year guidance, blaming fewer vet visits and weaker demand for premium treatments among U.S. pet owners. In afternoon New York trading, the stock changed hands at $88.44.

Zoetis’s slide catches attention—this company serves as a key signal for the premium pet health sector, which so far has outperformed much of consumer spending. For the first quarter, revenue inched up 3% to $2.262 billion, but when you exclude acquisitions and currency swings—looking at organic operational sales—they came in essentially unchanged.

Investors shrugged. Zoetis came in light, posting adjusted earnings of $1.53 per share—short of the $1.61 analysts surveyed by LSEG had penciled in, Reuters reported. Revenue landed at $2.31 billion. Adjusted earnings strip out things like acquisition expenses and purchase-accounting adjustments.

The company has trimmed its 2026 guidance, now putting adjusted earnings between $6.85 and $7.00 per share, with revenue seen at $9.680 billion to $9.960 billion. Back in February, management’s projection had been higher—$7.00 to $7.10 a share and revenue in a $9.825 billion to $10.025 billion range.

Most of the pressure landed in Zoetis’ U.S. pet segment. U.S. revenue slid 8% to $1.1 billion. Sales of companion-animal products dropped 11%, with the dermatology portfolio and Simparica Trio losing ground to rivals. Convenia and Cerenia felt the squeeze from generics, and Librela—the antibody drug for canine osteoarthritis pain—saw weaker sales.

Chief Executive Kristin Peck acknowledged that the first quarter brought tougher conditions than Zoetis had expected. “Increased price sensitivity” from pet owners is putting on pressure, she said, while competition has ramped up in dermatology and the key parasiticide segment—covering flea, tick, and worm treatments. Zoetis News

Peck told analysts there are “more entrants across more markets,” and according to Reuters, competitors are still pushing aggressive pricing and incentives longer than Zoetis anticipated. The company now plans to step up its direct-to-consumer push and tighten partnerships with veterinarians to help bolster demand. Reuters

Daniel Clark, an analyst at Leerink Partners, flagged that U.S. companion-animal sales missed the mark by a wide margin, blaming stiff competition and price-sensitive customers for the softer appetite for Zoetis products.

Offsets existed, but they fell short for investors. International revenue climbed 17% to $1.1 billion, driven by higher demand in both livestock and companion animals, along with a timing lift from Zoetis’ switch in fiscal-year alignment—an accounting tweak that erased a one-month reporting lag outside the U.S. That adjustment, the company noted, kicked in about $100 million of revenue for the quarter.

Pressure wasn’t limited to just one name—Elanco Animal Health dropped roughly 9%. IDEXX Laboratories, a player in veterinary diagnostics, shed about 1% during the afternoon session.

There’s a chance this guidance reduction isn’t the final word—if clinic traffic remains sluggish or rivals maintain price pressure to grab market share, further cuts could follow. Zoetis cautioned its outlook hinges on a range of variables: competition, product launches, deals, foreign exchange, taxes, and more, all of which could shift.

Zoetis keeps highlighting its pipeline to investors, touting more than a dozen candidates that could each bring in at least $100 million a year. The planned purchase of Neogen’s animal genomics business remains on track for the second half of 2026, according to the company. But on the ground, the immediate question is simpler: Will pet owners return to clinics, and how much are they ready to spend?

Stock Market Today

  • NetApp (NTAP) Valuation: Undervalued Despite Recent Share Price Gains
    May 13, 2026, 2:35 PM EDT. NetApp's (NTAP) stock has gained 21.2% over the past month and 19.0% over the last year, driven by demand in data storage, cloud infrastructure, and AI. Yet, a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis by Simply Wall St shows the stock is undervalued by approximately 35%, with an intrinsic value estimated at $179.04 versus the current price near $116. Recent Free Cash Flow projections indicate growth to $2.56 billion by 2035. The 5/6 valuation score signals more insights are needed, highlighting that despite recent gains, NetApp may still present value opportunities for investors focused on cash flow fundamentals.

Latest articles

Palantir Stock Slides as Zelenskiy Meeting Puts War-AI Bet in Focus

Palantir Stock Slides as Zelenskiy Meeting Puts War-AI Bet in Focus

13 May 2026
Palantir shares fell 4.4% to $129.97 Wednesday as CEO Alex Karp met President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv to discuss expanding AI use in Ukraine’s war effort. Kyiv’s Brave1 Dataroom project, launched with Palantir, is training AI models to intercept Russian drones. Russia fired at least 800 drones at Ukraine on Wednesday, killing six. Palantir’s U.S. government and commercial revenue surged in the first quarter.
Why Grab Holdings Stock Is Back Under Pressure After a Big Q1 Beat

Why Grab Holdings Stock Is Back Under Pressure After a Big Q1 Beat

13 May 2026
Grab shares fell 1.1% to $3.60 in New York after first-quarter revenue beat estimates, rising 24% to $955 million. Profit jumped to $120 million from $10 million a year earlier. Investors weighed strong results against Indonesia’s new 8% ride-hailing commission cap. Grab kept its 2026 revenue and adjusted EBITDA outlook unchanged.
SoFi Bought a Key IPO Access Tool. The Stock Is Still Telling a More Cautious Story

SoFi Bought a Key IPO Access Tool. The Stock Is Still Telling a More Cautious Story

13 May 2026
SoFi acquired PrimaryBid’s technology to expand IPO access for retail investors, confirmed by both companies. SoFi shares fell 2.9% to $15.44 after Truist cut its price target, citing concerns over loan and technology platforms. The acquisition follows a drop in technology-platform accounts and comes as SoFi reported strong first-quarter revenue and member growth. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Popular

Nokia Oyj’s AI Turn Gets a New Boss as Shares Rally Again

Nokia Oyj’s AI Turn Gets a New Boss as Shares Rally Again

13 May 2026
Nokia appointed Siemens executive Emma Falck to lead its Mobile Infrastructure unit starting Sept. 1 and join its group leadership team. Nokia shares rose 5.5% in Helsinki after first-quarter profit jumped 54% and sales to AI and cloud customers increased 49%. The company also launched new agentic AI tools for broadband networks. Falck previously held senior roles at Siemens, BCG, and KONE.
Intuit Stock Rises As QuickBooks Workforce Pushes Into Payroll And HR
Previous Story

Intuit Stock Rises As QuickBooks Workforce Pushes Into Payroll And HR

AAON Stock Jumps as Q1 Earnings, BASX Backlog Force a 2026 Guidance Reset
Next Story

AAON Stock Jumps as Q1 Earnings, BASX Backlog Force a 2026 Guidance Reset

Go toTop