London, May 19, 2026, 12:04 (BST)
Diageo shares traded higher on Tuesday, outpacing the FTSE 100 as some investors watched for signs that strong Guinness sales and new CEO Sir Dave Lewis’s early steps might help the group deal with weak U.S. spirits results. The stock changed hands at 1,571p/1,572p by 11:49 in London, up 19.5p, or 1.26%. The FTSE 100 added 0.73% at the same time, Barclays Smart Investor data showed. Data delayed by at least 15 minutes. Barclays Smart Investor
That counts now as Diageo stretches its recent steadier streak, following a tough period for the Johnnie Walker and Don Julio producer. The shares finished at 1,552.50p on Monday, May 18, after closing at 1,529.50p on Friday and 1,500p on Thursday, according to share price data. Share Prices
Diageo’s update on May 6 stuck to previous guidance, not announcing a new profit warning. The company reported third-quarter net sales up 2.3% to $4.5 billion. Organic net sales, the firm’s measure for like-for-like growth, edged up 0.3%. Gains in Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Africa managed to balance out weaker North American performance. Diageo
Lewis didn’t mince words. “North America remains our biggest challenge,” he said in the update. Diageo told investors it will lay out a strategy update with its full-year numbers on Aug. 6. The company is sticking to guidance for fiscal 2026: organic sales down 2%-3% and organic operating profit flat to up low single digits. Diageo
Diageo shares traded 4.7% higher at 1010 GMT after the latest update, according to Reuters, as the company outperformed estimates for a 2.3% drop in sales. “It’s early days for Dave, but he does seem to be grasping it,” Richard Scrope, manager at VT Tyndall Global Select, which owns Diageo stock, told Reuters. Reuters
Director buy adds another data point for Diageo shares
John Rishton, non-executive director at Diageo, picked up 3,274 ordinary shares at £15.27 apiece on May 18, according to an RNS. Share Prices
Beer is helping. Diageo opened its Littleconnell brewery in County Kildare on May 11, marking part of a nearly €1 billion Ireland investment. The company is also planning about €400 million more over the next three years for a new brewery focused on Guinness and Guinness 0.0. Lewis said there was “surging” demand for both brands. Diageo
Mixed signals from peers. Pernod Ricard, the No.2 Western spirits group after Diageo, warned in April that full-year organic net sales are set to drop 3%-4%. The company cited ongoing weak demand in the U.S. and China, and pressure in travel retail, which covers airport and travel hub duty-free channels. Reuters
The risk is still there: if U.S. spirits don’t pick up, the World Cup stock build and the Easter boost could drop out fast, and Guinness may have to shoulder more of the recovery. There’s also the Middle East conflict, which could lift energy, supply, or distribution costs. Diageo already warned that turning around North America will take more time. Reuters
Tuesday’s stock action looks more like a pause than a real recovery. Lewis will present the full-year figures and a long-awaited strategy update on Aug. 6, which is the next clear marker for investors.