Unilever Down After €1.5B Buyback, Focus on Margins

Unilever Down After €1.5B Buyback, Focus on Margins

June 8, 2026

London, June 8, 2026, 10:05 (BST)

Unilever PLC slipped in late London trade on Monday, paring some of Friday’s gains. The stock, tracked by AJ Bell, was last seen around 4,164p, down 24p or 0.57%. It opened at 4,220.5p. Unilever had climbed 2.71% on Friday ahead of a modest 0.07% uptick in the FTSE 100, after wrapping up a €1.5 billion share buyback.

Investors had looked to the buyback as a rare, visible support for capital returns while Fernando Fernandez works on a bigger overhaul of the company. In a buyback, a company purchases its own shares, which typically cuts the share count and can boost earnings per share by increasing profit per each share.

Unilever on Friday said it purchased 30,703,780 ordinary shares at a total market price of €1,499,999,891. The buyback wraps up the programme first announced with its full-year 2025 results and launched April 30.

Global stocks declined Monday with oil climbing as new Middle East unrest weighed. Reuters said London and other big European markets dropped 0.4% to 1%. AI stocks also came under pressure. “The market has gone a long way without a correction,” Lars Skovgaard, senior investment strategist at Danske Bank, told Reuters. Reuters

Unilever’s latest operating update is still on investors’ minds. Back in April, the company posted first-quarter underlying sales growth of 3.8%. That came from 2.9% growth in volumes and 0.9% from pricing. Fernandez said Unilever had “started the year well.” The company kept its guidance for full-year growth at the lower end of its 4% to 6% range. Unilever

That mix matters. For a consumer staples company—meaning sellers of goods like soap, detergent and food—volume-led growth is seen as healthier than just raising prices.

Price hikes across the sector are getting harder to digest. Reuters said Monday that Hindustan Unilever, Godrej Consumer Products, and Dabur have announced low- to mid-single-digit price rises, looking to protect margins as oil, freight and insurance costs climb. “The scope for further cost-cutting is gradually narrowing,” Axis Direct analyst Uttam Kumar Srimal said. Reuters

Procter & Gamble flagged the risk in April, warning of about a $1 billion post-tax drag on fiscal 2027 profit if oil prices stay high. Finance chief Andre Schulten called the exposure “significant.” Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management, said simply, “Oil is ubiquitous.” Reuters

Unilever is halfway through shifting its portfolio. The group said it’s agreed to merge its Foods business with McCormick, a deal that would build a $20 billion global flavours player. Unilever said the rest of the firm will be more focused on beauty, wellbeing, personal care and home care, aiming for €39 billion in revenue from its ongoing operations in 2025.

But risks aren’t one-sided. If oil stays steady, it could take off some of the cost pressure for packaging, transport and chemical supplies. A drawn-out conflict, though, means higher prices and probably weaker demand. The McCormick deal is exposed to approval and execution risk too, and investors won’t wait around if yet another consumer overhaul drags out or ends up more expensive than expected.

Unilever’s next stock events are the June 26 dividend and half-year results set for July 28. With the buyback finished, shares may move more on margin pressures as households and retailers keep resisting price hikes.

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