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The Earnings360 Team
Today's Featured Story Why Procter & Gamble Remains a Buy-and-Hold FavoriteWritten by Thomas Hughes. Published 10/27/2025. 
Key Points - Procter & Gamble is well-positioned to deliver market-beating total returns over the next two to five years.
- A low valuation, high yield, and outlook for sustained revenue and earnings growth underpin the outlook.
- Analysts and institutional trends suggest PG stock bottomed in Q3 2025 and is poised to move higher from there.
Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) looks attractive for long-term total returns: its stock price sits near the low end of its historical P/E range, its dividend yield is near the high end of its range, and FQ1 2026 results support its outlook for growth, cash flow, and capital returns. What are total returns? Total returns are an investor's net gain, including dividends and share-price appreciation. As of late October, the stock yields about 2.75% and could rise 25% or more over the coming years. It's easy to see why 10,000+ investors and global giants are in on the action. Their AI software helps major brands pinpoint their perfect audience and predict what content drives action.
Here's the kicker: RAD Intel is still private – but you can invest right now at just $0.81 per share.
This is what getting "in" early feels like. Missed Nvidia? Missed Shopify? This is your second shot. Early shares are still available – but not for long. Shares now open to investors – price changes from $0.81 on Nov 20. That potential price appreciation is supported by durable business quality and growth, a healthy balance sheet, and robust capital returns, including share repurchases. Share repurchases are important because they reduce the share count at a semi-aggressive pace each year and are unlikely to be suspended soon. The dividend—yielding above 2.5%—is attractive, and the outlook for further increases supports the stock's price. Procter & Gamble is a Dividend King with 70 consecutive years of annual increases and the capacity to continue raising the dividend for the foreseeable future. Share buybacks help offset the cost of dividend increases. The payout ratio is a reasonable ~65%, in line with peers, and analysts expect earnings growth. MarketBeat's consensus forecasts a mid-single-digit EPS CAGR—slightly above revenue growth and roughly matching the company's dividend growth rate.  Procter & Gamble Rises After Posting Solid Results Procter & Gamble's FQ1 results were solid: the company beat expectations on both the top and bottom lines, reporting 3.0% revenue growth. Gains were driven largely by FX translation and pricing, but all segments contributed and some showed organic growth. Beauty and Grooming delivered organic growth, helping drive a 2% organic increase for the business. Margin performance was another positive. While the company has faced margin pressure, it mitigated much of that impact, leaving margins in better shape than many anticipated. The quarter produced $5.4 billion in operating cash flow, $4.8 billion in net earnings, and a 3% increase in adjusted EPS. Adjusted EPS of $1.99—nearly 500 basis points above consensus—suggests management's guidance is on the cautious side. Procter & Gamble reaffirmed its earnings guidance, providing a range whose midpoint is slightly below the consensus estimate. Management expects some weakening in upcoming quarters to offset the Q1 strength. That outlook may understate the consumer resilience evident in its own results and in other consumer-focused companies' earnings reports. The likely outcome is that Procter & Gamble will outperform in the coming quarters, prompting improved guidance later in the year. Institutional and Analyst Trends Align With a Bottom for PG Stock Price Analysts and institutional activity point to a bottom in PG's stock price. Analysts rate it a Moderate Buy and expect double-digit upside, while institutions are net buyers. Institutions have bought more than $2.50 for every $1 sold this year and now own roughly 65% of the shares, providing a substantial support base. A move to the consensus target would put the market on track for new highs likely to be reached in 2026. The technical picture is constructive. The stock jumped about 2.5% in premarket trading on Oct. 24, helping confirm a bottom around $147. If that signal holds, PG should regain support at the moving-average cluster and could reach roughly $170 in early 2026 and challenge all-time highs by mid-2026. If not, the stock may linger near late-October levels until a stronger catalyst emerges.
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