Procter & Gamble Company

NYSE: PG
$166.58
+$0.74 (+0.4%)
Closing Price on November 13, 2024

PG Articles

If the Dow and S&P are going to continue their meteoric rise, they are going to need help from many of the stocks that so far have just sat on the sidelines, like Procter & Gamble.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Thursday include Alphabet, Avon, Bank of America, Intel, Roku, Snap and Western Digital.
Here is a consensus forecast of each of the 30 Dow Jones Industrial stocks, including a forward 12-month consensus analyst price target and an expected 2018 total return on each.
With the markets grinding higher and expensive, playing it safe makes sense now and may really make sense in 2018.
One strategy that has been popular each year as investors rebalance and make changes is the so-called Dogs of the Dow.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Tuesday include Altria, Apple, General Motors, Procter & Gamble and Walmart.
Even without a board seat, Nelson Peltz would continue to pressure for change. So, the Procter & Gamble board has decided to get rid of him, ironically, by allowing him to join their numbers.
Caterpillar, Nike, Coca-Cola, and Procter & Gamble lead the DJIA higher on Wednesday.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Thursday include Cisco Systems, Dollar General, NetApp, Pandora Media, Procter & Gamble and Target.
The preliminary count of Procter & Gamble proxies from last month's voting indicate that activist investor Nelson Peltz has won a board seat by an unbelievably tiny margin.
Mattel has rejected a buyout offer from Hasbro, Nelson Peltz won a seat on the Procter & Gamble board, Volkswagen will build a $12 billion electric car plant in China, and more important...
These five top stocks all pay good dividends and raise them every year. They also offer a degree of safety in what is clearly a very expensive market.
McDonald's, Home Depot, UnitedHealth, and Procter & Gamble led the DJIA to a small gain Monday.
General Electric, McDonald's, IBM, and Procter & Gamble led the DJIA on a downhill path Monday.
Procter & Gamble reported mixed fiscal first-quarter financial results before the markets opened on Friday.