Cintas Stock Just Lost Its Rebound — Why CTAS Traders Are Watching the UniFirst Deal

May 21, 2026
Cintas Stock Just Lost Its Rebound — Why CTAS Traders Are Watching the UniFirst Deal

NEW YORK, May 21, 2026, 08:05 (EDT)

Cintas Corp. shares head into Thursday’s Nasdaq session after giving back part of an early-week rebound, with CTAS closing Wednesday at $171.36, down 0.49%. The stock had jumped 3.68% on Monday, then fell Tuesday and Wednesday.

Regular trading had not opened in New York. Nasdaq’s cash session runs from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern time, and Thursday is not listed as a U.S. exchange holiday; the next full NYSE closure on the 2026 calendar is Memorial Day, Monday, May 25.

That matters because Cintas lagged a broader market bounce. The S&P 500 rose 1.1% on Wednesday, the Dow gained 1.3% and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.5%, helped by a pullback in bond yields and oil prices, the Associated Press reported.

For CTAS, the issue is less one soft close than the price investors are still willing to pay for a steady services business. The shares had a market value of about $68.6 billion and a price-earnings ratio near 35 at the latest quote; price-earnings ratio means the stock price divided by profit per share, a shorthand measure of valuation.

The main company-specific overhang remains Cintas’ pending $5.5 billion acquisition of UniFirst. Cintas and UniFirst said in March they agreed to a $310-a-share cash-and-stock deal, with the combined company expected to serve about 1.5 million business customers across North America; Cintas CEO Todd Schneider called it a “critical step” for shareholder and customer value. Default

The deal is also the competitive story. Reuters reported in March that Cintas was looking to expand reach and cut costs as it competes with rivals including Aramark in garment and facility services, a route-heavy business where scale can matter on delivery costs and customer density.

Cintas finance chief Scott Garula told investors the company had identified about $375 million in operating cost synergies, meaning savings from combining operations, within four years. He also said those savings do not include any assumed revenue gains, a useful guardrail for investors trying to size the deal.

The earnings backdrop is still solid. Cintas reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $2.84 billion, up 8.9%, and organic revenue growth of 8.2%, which strips out acquisitions and currency moves; Schneider cited “record revenues and strong operating margins,” and the company raised its full-year revenue and adjusted earnings-per-share forecasts. Default

Peer moves have been uneven. On Tuesday, Cintas fell 1.32% but still outperformed Aramark, down 2.64%, and UniFirst, down 0.59%, according to MarketWatch; UniFirst now trades less like a standalone uniform company and more like a deal-spread name, with investors watching approval risk and timing.

Wall Street’s published target range leaves room for argument. MarketBeat’s tracker showed 14 analysts with an average 12-month price target of $215.17, with estimates ranging from $160 to $257, a spread that reflects both the quality of the business and questions around valuation and execution.

But the setup can still break against Cintas. Company caution language points to regulatory and shareholder approvals, possible legal proceedings, integration problems, higher costs, management distraction, and pressure from fuel, energy, materials, labor and tariffs; any of those could dull the expected UniFirst benefits or keep the stock under pressure if broader markets lose support.

For now, CTAS is not trading on one clean catalyst. It is a high-valuation services stock, an index constituent, and a merger story all at once — a mix that can make a small daily decline look routine until the next deal or earnings detail moves the tape.

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