PG

Procter & Gamble Price

Closed
PG
$142,32
-$2,17(-%1,50)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-22 04:18 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-22 04:18, Procter & Gamble (PG) is priced at $142,32, with a total market cap of $332,56B, a P/E ratio of 24,47, and a dividend yield of %1,48. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $142,32 and $144,69. The current price is %0,00 above the day's low and %1,63 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 10,89M. Over the past 52 weeks, PG has traded between $137,62 to $170,99, and the current price is -%16,76 away from the 52-week high.

PG Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$144,49
Market Cap$332,56B
Volume10,89M
P/E Ratio24,47
Dividend Yield (TTM)%1,48
Dividend Amount$1,09
Diluted EPS (TTM)6,79
Net Income (FY)$15,97B
Revenue (FY)$84,28B
Earnings Date2026-04-24
EPS Estimate1,56
Revenue Estimate$20,55B
Shares Outstanding2,30B
Beta (1Y)0.403
Ex-Dividend Date2026-04-24
Dividend Payment Date2026-05-15

About PG

The Procter & Gamble Company provides branded consumer packaged goods worldwide. It operates through five segments: Beauty; Grooming; Health Care; Fabric & Home Care; and Baby, Feminine & Family Care. The Beauty segment offers conditioners, shampoos, styling aids, and treatments under the Head & Shoulders, Herbal Essences, Pantene, and Rejoice brands; and antiperspirants and deodorants, personal cleansing, and skin care products under the Olay, Old Spice, Safeguard, Secret, and SK-II brands. The Grooming segment provides shave care products and appliances under the Braun, Gillette, and Venus brand names. The Health Care segment offers toothbrushes, toothpastes, and other oral care products under the Crest and Oral-B brand names; and gastrointestinal, rapid diagnostics, respiratory, vitamins/minerals/supplements, pain relief, and other personal health care products under the Metamucil, Neurobion, Pepto-Bismol, and Vicks brands. The Fabric & Home Care segment provides fabric enhancers, laundry additives, and laundry detergents under the Ariel, Downy, Gain, and Tide brands; and air care, dish care, P&G professional, and surface care products under the Cascade, Dawn, Fairy, Febreze, Mr. Clean, and Swiffer brands. The Baby, Feminine & Family Care segment offers baby wipes, taped diapers, and pants under the Luvs and Pampers brands; adult incontinence and feminine care products under the Always, Always Discreet, and Tampax brands; and paper towels, tissues, and toilet papers under the Bounty, Charmin, and Puffs brands. The company sells its products primarily through mass merchandisers, e-commerce, grocery stores, membership club stores, drug stores, department stores, distributors, wholesalers, specialty beauty stores, high-frequency stores, pharmacies, electronics stores, and professional channels, as well as directly to consumers. The Procter & Gamble Company was founded in 1837 and is headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio.
SectorConsumer Defensive
IndustryHousehold & Personal Products
CEOShailesh G. Jejurikar
HeadquartersCincinnati,OH,US
Official Websitehttp://us.pg.com
Employees (FY)109,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$773,24K
Net Income per Employee$146,55K

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Procter & Gamble (PG) is currently trading at $142,32, with a 24h change of -%1,50. The 52-week trading range is $137,62–$170,99.

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Hot Posts About Procter & Gamble (PG)

BoredApeResistance

BoredApeResistance

04-16 12:02
So I've been tracking this uranium play for a while now, and honestly the setup looks pretty compelling right now. Everyone's focused on AI, but what's flying under the radar is the energy crisis that's about to hit us. Let me break down why uranium stocks might be one of the best moves for patient investors. First, the supply side is getting squeezed hard. Russia's uranium ban kicked in August last year, and Kazakhstan just tightened extraction taxes. Meanwhile, electricity demand is about to explode. We're talking 20% growth by 2030 just from AI data centers alone. According to the numbers, those data centers alone will pull 323 terawatt hours of electricity annually - that's seven times New York City's entire current consumption. By 2030, data centers are projected to eat up 8% of all U.S. electricity. That's not small. That's structural demand that nuclear energy has to fill. Here's where it gets interesting though - uranium supply can't keep pace. The deficit projections are wild. We're looking at potential 240-million-pound shortfalls by 2040, which means the world needs to build over 5 new major uranium mines in the next 20 years. Current mine supply has never been more fragile, which is exactly why uranium stocks are positioned for serious upside. Let me walk through some of the best uranium stocks worth watching. Cameco (CCJ) is the obvious anchor play here. Bank of America added it to their US 1 List, Goldman Sachs raised their target to $56, and RBC Capital is actively buying on weakness. Their recent earnings were soft - 13 cents versus 26 cents expected - but the CEO is pretty clear that market tightness and mine depletion will keep prices elevated. NexGen Energy (NXE) is another one that caught my attention. If their Rook 1 project gets Canadian approval, we could be looking at one of the world's largest uranium mines. What's compelling is their demand forecast - they're modeling 127% uranium demand growth by 2030, jumping to 200% by 2040. That's the kind of structural shift that makes long-term uranium stocks attractive. Energy Fuels (UUUU) is trading oversold at $5.60. The insider buying back in May was telling - about 11 insiders loaded up, including the CEO and several directors. The Russian ban opened up $2.7 billion in authorized funding for domestic LEU production, which directly benefits companies like this. Denison Mines (DNN) broke below key moving averages recently but the technicals are screaming oversold. Roth MKM just initiated coverage with a buy and $2.60 target. Their McLean Lake mill can process 24 million pounds annually, which gives them serious strategic value in the medium term. Paladin Energy (PALAF) is trading at $7.38 and also showing oversold signals. The acquisition of Fission Uranium would make them the third-largest uranium producer globally, churning out 10% of world supply. Morgan Stanley has a $11.66 target on this one. If you want broader exposure without picking individual stocks, there are a couple of clean uranium ETF plays. The Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM) is a pure-play junior mining fund with a 0.80% expense ratio. It holds most of these names - Paladin, Uranium Energy, Denison, Energy Fuels. The VanEck Uranium and Nuclear Energy ETF (NLR) is broader at 0.64% expense ratio, mixing in nuclear utilities like Constellation Energy and PG&E alongside the miners. Look, the thesis here is straightforward. Demand for uranium is about to spike due to AI infrastructure build-out. Supply can't match that demand for years. You've got a structural imbalance, which historically is how you get explosive moves in commodity plays. The best uranium stocks are technically oversold right now, which means the risk-reward is tilted in your favor if you're thinking long-term. This isn't a quick flip - this is the kind of position you hold while the AI energy story plays out over the next several years.
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