Today: 19 July 2026
P&G (NYSE:PG) Outperforms Staples Sector as Oil Surge Challenges July Earnings
18 July 2026
2 mins read

P&G (NYSE:PG) Outperforms Staples Sector as Oil Surge Challenges July Earnings

NEW YORK, July 18, 2026, 17:12 EDT

  • P&G rose 2.0% over the past week while the S&P 500 declined 1.6%.
  • Shares ended the session 2.8% lower than Friday’s peak, as crude saw an increase of roughly 16%.
  • The stock goes ex-dividend on July 24, with quarterly earnings due on July 29.

The Procter & Gamble Company gained 2.0% last week, ending at $149.98. This marked the best performance among key U.S. household-products competitors. U.S. markets did not trade on Saturday.

The gain exceeded the S&P 500 by 3.6 percentage points. However, the closing price on Friday was 2.8% under the session peak. At its highest point that session, P&G was almost 5% above its previous Friday close.

The turnaround heightened expectations for P&G’s results due on July 29. Brent crude rose approximately 16% over the week, closing at $88.10. WTI followed suit, ending at $82.49.

Rising oil prices can increase freight expenses and petrochemical packaging costs. These factors have already weighed on global consumer-goods supply chains this year.

Company or indexFriday closeFriday moveWeekly move
The Procter & Gamble Company $149.98-1.0%+2.0%
Church & Dwight Co. (NYSE:CHD)$98.07-1.1%+1.8%
Colgate-Palmolive Co. $92.98-1.2%+0.8%
Kimberly-Clark Corp. $108.35-0.6%-3.6%
S&P 5007,457.69-1.0%-1.6%

Weekly changes are based on the closing prices from July 10 to July 17.

P&G outperformed its peers during the week. On Friday, though, its drop was in line with the wider market. The stock’s pullback during the session indicated investors were unwilling to retain the entire advance.

U.S. data released on Thursday showed some support for demand, with retail sales up 0.2% in June and core retail sales climbing 0.5%.

P&G posted 3% organic sales growth in its fiscal third quarter in April. Volume accounted for two percentage points of the increase, while pricing added one.

Beauty posted a 7% organic growth increase, while fabric and home care climbed 3%.

Chief Executive Shailesh Jejurikar said, “We’re increasing investments to accelerate momentum with consumers.” Procter & Gamble Investor Relations

Margins stayed soft. Core gross margin dropped by 100 basis points, with tariffs accounting for a 50-point decline and commodities shaving off an additional 10.

Management maintained its fiscal 2026 core EPS forecast at $6.83 to $7.09, projecting results toward the lower bound of the range. The guidance factors in $400 million in after-tax tariff expenses, with commodities contributing an additional $150 million.

MarketScreener’s preliminary consensus estimates quarterly revenue at $21.38 billion and expects earnings per share of $1.40 for the report due July 29.

The stock goes ex-dividend on Friday, July 24. Its quarterly dividend of $1.0885 equates to an annualized yield of about 2.9% based on Friday’s closing price. The payout is scheduled for on or after August 17.

Results are due Wednesday, July 29, at 8:30 a.m. EDT. Investors are watching for updates on fiscal 2027 expenses and progress on restoring gross margins.

Risks: A sustained oil shock may drive up packaging and freight expenses. Tariffs are an ongoing challenge. Weaker volume would further limit margin protection.

P&G faces earnings after outperforming its peers over the past week. A reversal on Friday signals that investors remain focused on margin evidence.

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. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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