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Additional Reading from MarketBeat 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) appears attractive for long-term total returns because its stock sits near the low end of its historical P/E range, its yield is near the high end of its range, and its FQ1 2026 results reaffirm an outlook for growth, cash flow, and capital returns. Total returns include dividends and share-price appreciation. The stock yields roughly 2.75% as of late October and could rise 25% or more over the coming years. An unstoppable force is reshaping America — one so powerful it's already disrupting how we work, invest, and live. Porter Stansberry calls it The Final Displacement — a rare turning point that's only happened four times in human history, each one redefining entire eras. His new documentary reveals why this shift could trigger both immense loss and unprecedented opportunity, and what you can do to prepare before it accelerates. Click here to stream The Final Displacement free today That potential price appreciation would be supported by the company's business quality and growth, which underpin a healthy balance sheet and robust capital returns, including share repurchases. Share repurchases are critical to the outlook because they reduce the share count at a semi-aggressive pace each year and are unlikely to be suspended anytime soon. The dividend is appealing, with a yield above 2.5%. Another positive is the outlook for distribution increases. Procter & Gamble is a Dividend King with 70 consecutive years of annual increases and has the capacity to continue raising the dividend for the foreseeable future. Buybacks help offset the cost of dividend increases, and the payout ratio—around 65%—is in line with peers. Consensus figures reported by MarketBeat forecast a mid-single-digit EPS CAGR, modestly outpacing revenue growth and aligning with the company's expected dividend growth rate.  Procter & Gamble Rises After Posting Solid Results Procter & Gamble's FQ1 results were solid, with the company outperforming on both the top and bottom lines and reporting 3.0% revenue growth. Gains were driven primarily by FX translation and price increases, but all segments contributed. Beauty and Grooming delivered organic growth, helping the business achieve a 2% organic increase. Margins were another area of strength: management mitigated pressures better than expected. The quarter produced $5.4 billion in operating cash flow, $4.8 billion in net earnings, and adjusted EPS of $1.99—nearly 5% above consensus—suggesting the company's guidance may be conservative. Procter & Gamble reaffirmed its earnings guidance, with a midpoint slightly below the consensus estimate. Management's outlook anticipates some weakness in upcoming quarters that offsets Q1 strength; however, the guidance appears conservative given signs of consumer resiliency in its own and other consumer-focused companies' earnings reports. It is likely P&G will outperform in the coming quarters and that management will revise guidance higher later in the year. Institutional and Analyst Trends Align With a Bottom for PG Stock Price Analysts and institutional activity point to a possible bottom for PG. Analysts rate it a Moderate Buy and expect double-digit upside, while institutions have been net purchasers. Institutions bought more than $2.50 for every $1 sold this year and now own roughly 65% of the shares, providing a solid support base. A move to the consensus price target would put the stock on track for new highs, likely reached in 2026. Technical action is positive. PG jumped about 2.5% in premarket trading on Oct. 24, confirming a short-term bottom near $147. If the market follows through, the stock should regain support at the moving-average cluster and could reach $170 in early 2026 and all-time highs by mid-2026. If that momentum doesn't materialize, PG will likely trade sideways near late-October levels until a stronger catalyst emerges.
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