LONDON, March 13, 2026, 17:22 GMT
- Diageo shares were up about 2.1% on Friday at 1,467.5 pence, still close to the bottom of their 52-week range. 1
- A March 12 prospectus supplement folded in Diageo’s interim results, updated officer details and said there had been no significant change since Dec. 31, 2025. 2
- Investors are still digesting February’s guidance cut, dividend reset and debt-reduction push under new CEO Dave Lewis. 3
Diageo shares rose about 2.1% in London on Friday to 1,467.5 pence, a day after the Guinness and Johnnie Walker maker published a supplement to its base prospectus, the umbrella document it uses for debt issuance. Even after the gain, the stock sat near the bottom of its 52-week range of 1,420.5 pence to 2,215 pence. 1
That matters now because the filing landed only two weeks after new CEO Dave Lewis cut Diageo’s fiscal 2026 outlook and halved the interim dividend, a reset that sharpened investor focus on growth, cash flow and debt. The fresh filing gave the market little sign that the pressure on the balance sheet or the turnaround plan had materially changed. 3
The March 12 supplement did not announce a new bond sale. It incorporated Diageo’s interim financial statements into the debt document, updated officer details to show Lewis as chief executive and Nik Jhangiani back as chief financial officer, and said there had been no significant change in the group’s financial position or performance since Dec. 31, 2025. 2
On Feb. 25, Diageo said first-half organic sales — a measure that strips out currency moves and acquisitions or disposals — fell 2.8%, while adjusted operating profit also slipped 2.8%. It cut its 2026 sales outlook, rebased the interim dividend to 20 cents a share and said net debt at Dec. 31 stood at $21.7 billion, though it kept free-cash-flow guidance at $3 billion. 4
Lewis said pressure on consumer wallets was “by far and away” the biggest challenge. In Diageo’s own results statement, he said the weaker U.S. spirits business reflected tighter disposable income and competition from cheaper alternatives aimed at a more stretched shopper. 3
Diageo has been selling assets to create room. In December it agreed to sell its 65% stake in East African Breweries to Asahi for $2.3 billion, and the company said the deal should reduce net debt to EBITDA — a debt-to-earnings measure — by about 0.25 times when it closes in the second half of 2026. 5
The company has also been reviewing other holdings. Reuters reported in January, citing Bloomberg News, that Diageo was weighing options for its China assets, including a sale, as Goldman Sachs and UBS reviewed operations including its more than 63% stake in baijiu maker Sichuan Swellfun. 6
The strain is not limited to Diageo. Pernod Ricard reported weaker first-half sales across all five of its priority markets in February, while Brown-Forman said this month the operating environment would remain challenging even after it beat quarterly estimates. 7
When Lewis unveiled the reset in February, Diageo’s shares fell nearly 10% and dragged peers Pernod Ricard, Remy Cointreau and Campari lower. Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell, said, “These are awful results, and the repair job is massive,” while Goodbody analyst Fintan Ryan said Lewis would be judged properly only after a fuller strategy arrives later this year. 3
But Friday’s bounce does not settle the bigger question. If U.S. demand stays soft, Chinese white spirits remain weak and Diageo leans harder on price cuts to recover volume, margins could stay under pressure just as the group tries to lower debt and navigate tariff uncertainty. 3