London, Jan 11, 2026, 08:36 GMT — Market closed
- Unilever gained 1.7% on Friday, buoyed by a wider rally in London stocks following the U.S. jobs report.
- The stock is still far from its 52-week peak, as investors balance expectations of rate cuts against concerns over growth and margin performance.
- Upcoming triggers to watch: U.S. inflation figures on Jan. 13 and Unilever’s full-year earnings on Feb. 12.
Unilever PLC’s shares closed up 1.7% at 4,744 pence on Friday, finishing the week stronger. With the London market closed Sunday, trading resumes Monday amid renewed focus on macroeconomic data and interest rates. (Yahoo Finance)
This move takes on added weight as Unilever approaches its full-year results next month, with investors keen to understand the business after shedding its ice cream division. The company will announce its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 figures on Feb. 12. (Unilever)
The FTSE 100 hit a record closing high on Friday, boosted by a U.S. jobs report that kept hopes alive for Federal Reserve rate cuts ahead. Traders currently price in roughly 54 basis points of easing for the year — a basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point — according to LSEG data referenced by Reuters. (Reuters)
The rate picture remains unsettled. “A likely ‘hot’ inflation print next week suggests no action before March,” James Knightley, chief international economist at ING, said Friday. (Reuters)
Unilever’s stock technically has wiggle room in either direction. Its 52-week range spans about 4,610 pence to 5,542 pence. Friday’s close landed below the upper end of that bracket and hovered close to recent lows. (Morningstar Global)
The portfolio saw a recent update. Unilever carried out an 8-for-9 share consolidation after spinning off its ice cream arm, Magnum, last December. The goal: streamline its focus on household and personal care brands. (Reuters)
Chief executive Fernando Fernandez described the next phase as sharper and more primed for deals. Back in December, he revealed the group plans to spend roughly 1.5 billion euros annually on mergers and acquisitions, focusing mainly on the U.S. He also projected a second-half operating margin of no less than 19.5% following the separation. (Reuters)
In February, traders will focus on whether growth comes from volume or price. Operating margin — the portion of sales retained as profit — will also be under scrutiny. Investors will seek updates on the group’s plans for cash deployment post spin-off, such as bolt-on acquisitions or buybacks.
Ahead of that, all eyes turn to the U.S. consumer price index for December 2025, set for release Tuesday, Jan. 13. This report could swiftly shift global rate expectations—and with them, valuations for steady consumer stocks like Unilever. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
The path isn’t smooth. Any drop in consumer demand, a rise in input costs, or currency shifts hitting the group’s emerging-market profits could quickly sour investor confidence in bold margin forecasts.