Unilever share price today: ULVR ticks up as CEO share sale filing lands and investors eye next update
17 February 2026
1 min read

Unilever share price today: ULVR ticks up as CEO share sale filing lands and investors eye next update

London, Feb 17, 2026, 08:12 GMT — Regular session

  • Unilever picked up roughly 0.3% in the first part of London trading.
  • CEO Fernando Fernandez unloaded shares following the vesting of an award, according to a disclosure.
  • Fresh remarks out of CAGNY and the April 30 Q1 update are on investors’ radar.

Unilever shares edged up in early London action Tuesday, as markets digested a new share purchase by CEO Fernando Fernandez alongside last week’s muted growth guidance. By 0810 GMT, the stock had gained roughly 0.3% to 5,435.5 pence. (Google)

Since spinning off its Magnum ice cream division back in December, the Dove soap maker has shifted its focus—personal care, beauty, and wellbeing are now front and center in its pitch.

On Feb. 12, Unilever told investors it’s looking at underlying sales growth for 2026 at the lower end—think 4%—of its 4% to 6% multi-year target, citing weakness in both the U.S. and Europe. The company pointed to a small bump in its 2025 operating margin, aiming for 20%, and flagged price hikes of about 2% for this year. RBC Capital Markets analyst James Edwardes Jones acknowledged “signs of progress,” but warned, “it will take time.” Over at Quilter Cheviot, Chris Beckett described the consumer as “okay-ish”—definitely “far from firing on all cylinders.” (Reuters)

Unilever senior executive Fernandez unloaded 17,327 shares at a weighted average of 52.50 pounds on Feb. 12, according to a UK regulatory filing. Those shares had just vested—a performance plan delivered 17,327.697378 shares to Fernandez. The same disclosure listed Unilever Markets president Reginaldo Ecclissato as receiving roughly 17,004 shares from vesting. (Investegate)

Unilever tracks underlying sales growth using its own organic metric, which removes the effects of currency moves and any acquisitions or disposals. The company breaks this figure down into price and volume.

Unilever reported returning 6.0 billion euros to shareholders in 2025 via dividends and buybacks, with a fourth-quarter interim dividend set at 0.4664 euros per share. The company also indicated plans for a new buyback program—up to 1.5 billion euros—expected to kick off in the second quarter of 2026. (Unilever)

It’s standard for executives to offload shares once their awards vest. Still, these sales tend to draw attention, especially when the stock’s flirting with its highs and another round of guidance is just ahead.

Investors now face a key uncertainty: can Unilever keep its volumes in the black while price hikes slow and rivals refuse to ease up. Procter & Gamble, Nestle, and Reckitt Benckiser are all doubling down on marketing and rolling out product revamps—raising the stakes, and not offering Unilever much margin for error.

The risk? If softness persists in North America and Europe and promotions intensify, Unilever might hit a ceiling on price hikes—leaving margins stuck.

Unilever heads to the CAGNY Conference later on Tuesday, with investors eyeing new detail on pricing, volumes, and when the buyback might kick off. Its next set piece is the first-quarter trading statement, due April 30. (Unilever)

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