PG Analysis: Procter & Gamble Surges 5% in a Week as Defensive Rotation Accelerates — Why the Dividend King's $391 Billion Empire Is the Market's Favourite Safe Haven
Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) is doing exactly what defensive investors pay it to do. While the broader market sold off sharply this week — dragged lower by AI disruption fears hammering software stocks and geopolitical uncertainty rattling risk assets — PG climbed 5.4% to $167.18, advancing against a sea of red. The stock now sits 21% above its 52-week low of $137.62, though still 7% below its 52-week high of $179.99. The move isn't just flight-to-safety mechanics. P&G's most recent quarter (fiscal Q2 2026, ending December 2025) delivered $22.2 billion in revenue with a 51.2% gross margin — the highest in at least four quarters — while generating $4.97 billion in operating cash flow. The consumer staples giant raised its quarterly dividend again, extending a streak that now spans 67 consecutive years, cementing its status as a Dividend King. At $390.6 billion in market capitalisation and a 25x trailing PE, PG trades at a premium to the S&P 500. But in a market where software companies are losing half their value overnight and defence stocks are pricing in war, the question for investors isn't whether PG is expensive — it's whether predictability commands an even higher price.