São Paulo, May 21, 2026, 17:05 BRT
Ambev S.A. shares in São Paulo traded up again on Thursday, with ABEV3 rising 1.42% to 16.45 reais late in the B3 day. The stock came within reach of its one-year high at 17.04 reais after hitting 16.55 reais earlier. Ambev has been gaining since earnings, as buyers stay interested in the brewer’s Brazil beer sales and margins.
Ambev shares are trading more like a test of management’s grip on price, mix and costs into midyear, instead of behaving like a slow consumer staple now. The Ibovespa index edged up 0.14% to 177,603.69, which put Ambev in front of the index for the session.
B3 traded on its regular schedule in São Paulo on Thursday. Standard hours are 10:00 a.m. to 4:55 p.m. local time. The exchange’s holiday calendar marks the next listed-equity closure for June 4, Corpus Christi. May 21 was not a market holiday but had a CSD2 suspension, which only affected structured dollar-spread trades related to U.S. settlement, not regular equity trading.
Ambev’s latest numbers are still setting the pace. The brewer reported first-quarter organic net revenue up 8.1%, and normalized EBITDA up 10.1% at 7.56 billion reais. Organic figures leave out currency and business scope changes; EBITDA looks at profit before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
Ambev CEO Carlos Lisboa said the company is off to “a solid start to 2026,” pointing to higher beer volumes, double-digit normalized EBITDA gains and wider margins. Ambev reported operating cash flow up at 3.16 billion reais. The board signed off on a fresh 700 million-real interest-on-capital payment, a type of payout used by Brazilian firms.
Brazil Beer unit showed most of the growth. Volume there was up 1.2%, and net revenue climbed 9.6%. Premium and super-premium brands including Stella Artois, Corona and Original led, each showing volume gains in the low twenties, according to the filing. Net revenue per hectoliter in the unit increased 8.3%.
Ambev’s first-quarter net profit increased 2.1% year-on-year, Reuters said earlier this month, with the Brazil Beer segment getting a boost from Carnival. The company calls Carnival a key “megaplatform” for sales. Ambev is also looking ahead to the FIFA World Cup, which it expects will create another surge in demand. Reuters
Ambev added a new governance detail in a recent filing. In a Form 6-K signed May 19, the company said its board approved the replacement of logistics vice-president Paulo André Zagman with Fernando Maffessoni. Maffessoni, who is currently logistics vice-president for the Middle Americas Zone at Anheuser-Busch InBev, is set to take over on Aug. 1, pending formal investiture.
The sector has seen a lift. Anheuser-Busch InBev, which controls Ambev, posted its first increase in drinks sold since 2023 in the first quarter, according to Reuters. AB InBev CEO Michel Doukeris said “Cheers to beer.” Siphelele Mdudu, analyst at Matrix Fund Managers, told Reuters the company did a good job focusing resources on its top global brands. Reuters
UBS isn’t jumping on the rally. The bank kept its sell rating on Ambev but lifted its U.S. ADR target to $2.90 from $2.65 last week, MT Newswires reported on MarketScreener. Meanwhile, Benzinga data showed the ADR consensus target at $3.01, still under Thursday’s share price.
Downside risk is clear. Ambev kept its Brazil Beer COGS per hectoliter guidance at a 4.5%-7.5% rise for 2026, citing a dynamic global geopolitical environment. The company also posted higher net finance costs, citing foreign-exchange and commodity hedges. Bad weather hitting out-of-home beer sales or weaker premium demand could put margin pressure fast.
Ambev’s U.S. ADR traded at $3.27 in late New York action, gaining 4 cents. AB InBev’s U.S. ADR last was at $83.39. The Brazil line still gives the best look at local investor demand. Beer volume, the premium mix, and cash returns continue to support the trade.