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P&G Shares Edge Higher Before Market Close As Inflation Looms
23 May 2026
2 mins read

P&G Shares Edge Higher Before Market Close As Inflation Looms

New York, May 23, 2026, 16:06 (EDT)

Procter & Gamble finished Friday at $144.44, up 0.73%. That brought the stock to a weekly gain of about 2% as U.S. markets closed ahead of the Memorial Day break. Shares remained under their 52-week high of $170.99, while sitting close to the 52-week low at $137.62.

NYSE markets are shut on Monday, May 25, for Memorial Day, taking one trading day off the table for investors looking to see if the move can hold. The rest of the week shifts to consumer confidence numbers, the Fed’s favored inflation measure, jobless claims, durable goods orders, and a fresh read on first-quarter GDP.

P&G deals in everyday goods, but the timing that matters most for the company still comes down to what shoppers pay, what retailers order, and how much cost it can take on before margins start to hurt.

The S&P 500 closed up 0.4% at 7,473.47 on Friday, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.6% to 50,579.70. Major U.S. indexes booked another week of gains as earnings optimism and hopes for lower geopolitical pressure pulled investors back in.

P&G’s most recent update is still the fiscal third-quarter numbers from April. Net sales were up 7% to $21.2 billion. Organic sales, which cut out currency shifts and deals, gained 3%. Core earnings per share also climbed 3% to $1.59. Shailesh Jejurikar, P&G’s president and CEO, said it was a “solid acceleration” for the quarter and noted the company kept investing, citing a “challenging geopolitical and economic environment.” Procter & Gamble

The relief has a ceiling. Reuters said last month P&G stuck to its warning on a near $1 billion post-tax blow to fiscal 2027 earnings from higher oil, and still sees an almost $400 million tariff bill for fiscal 2026. CFO Andre Schulten said the company’s commodity risk is “nothing to sneeze at.” Brian Jacobsen at Annex Wealth Management told Reuters high oil prices “seep into everything.” Reuters

Restructuring kept drawing attention last week. On May 15, Business Recorder said Colgate-Palmolive Pakistan is set to buy P&G Pakistan’s Port Qasim land, factory and assets in Karachi. P&G has started shutting down its direct presence in Pakistan and will switch to a third-party distributor model.

Peer action was uneven. Colgate-Palmolive’s U.S. stock settled at $90.61 on Friday, a move up from $89.92 at Monday’s close. MarketWatch data pointed to a 0.06% dip for Clorox on Friday, while P&G edged higher. The sector stayed mostly steady—no sweeping re-rating.

Consumer trends still look tougher to pin down. U.S. jobless claims dropped to 209,000 for the week ending May 16, according to Reuters, but there were signs of higher input costs and a softer housing market in the same report. “Enough stability” is how Matthew Martin, senior U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, described the labor market, saying it’s enough for the Fed to wait. Reuters

P&G faces risk if Thursday’s PCE inflation numbers — the Fed’s preferred gauge, with core PCE excluding food and energy — come in hot. Stubborn inflation could mean more cost pressure and make shoppers more cautious. Soft consumer confidence would undercut the argument that price hikes and upgrades will be enough to support sales volume.

P&G heads into the shorter week ticking higher, but it’s not a real breakout yet. Investors are watching to see if inflation, oil, and consumer demand keep giving staples traders enough reason to hold on here.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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