London, March 17, 2026, 19:31 GMT
Diageo shares in London barely budged Tuesday, ending up just 0.07% at 1,450 pence—only a shade above their 12-month low of 1,420.5p. Over in New York, the group’s U.S.-listed stock stood at $77.00 as of 1910 UTC.
Why does it matter? Last month, Lewis’s first results call shifted the outlook for investors. Diageo slashed its 2026 organic sales target—now guiding for a 2%-3% drop, excluding currency and acquisitions—cut the interim dividend in half to 20 cents, and promised a more detailed strategy update later this year. Lewis pointed to “significant opportunities” for cranking up competitiveness, drilling in on “customer, customer, customer” right out of the gate. Diageo
Lewis picked up 306,039 options at a strike price of £14.66, plus another 306,039 conditional share awards, according to a regulatory filing released Tuesday. Both grants fall under Diageo’s 2023 long-term incentive plan, which is tied to performance. Finance chief Hannah Brooks landed similar awards, this time linked to the company’s U.S.-listed shares. All grants were issued outside a trading venue—not through open-market purchases.
Diageo shares ended Tuesday nearly 33% off their 12-month peak of 2,214p. During the session, they bounced in a narrow 1,442p to 1,457.5p range. The FTSE 100 added 0.83%.
Demand remains the sticking point. Diageo posted a 4.0% decline in first-half net sales, landing at $10.46 billion, with organic net sales sliding 2.8%. Softer U.S. spirits demand weighed, and Chinese white spirits—the baijiu unit—continued to struggle. As of Dec. 31, net debt was $21.7 billion.
Pernod Ricard, Remy Cointreau and Campari all felt the impact when the February warning landed, making clear the squeeze goes well beyond a single player. “Awful” is how AJ Bell’s Dan Coatsworth summed up Diageo’s half-year results, adding, “the repair job is massive.” For Fintan Ryan at Goodbody, Lewis’s initial steps are “just the trailer”—there’s more to come on strategy. Reuters
Still, risks remain. Lewis points to ongoing tariff questions, squeezed consumer budgets, and rising pressure from lower-priced rivals. Diageo faces a tricky balance: restoring volume growth while hanging on to pricing power and continuing to support its brands.
Looking ahead, Diageo’s financial calendar lists the UK ex-dividend date for April 16, with the U.S. ex-dividend following a day later on April 17. A third-quarter trading update is set for May 6. No other trading statements are scheduled before then, the company notes.