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He called gold’s rise to within two days … now he says do this

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Many people were shocked to see gold skyrocket last year.

Not Sean Brodrick.

He called it’s rise to within two days.

He also said it would cross $5,000 quickly in 2026.

In fact …

He’s nailed the top and bottom of every golden bull for over 20 years.

Now he says gold is zooming towards $10,000 …

And there’s a hidden opportunity inside this surge.

He calls it the Golden Paradox.

Click here to learn more.


 
 
 
 
 
 

Special Report

Procter & Gamble Confirms a Bottom—Time to Start Compounding?

Submitted by Thomas Hughes. Publication Date: 1/25/2026.

Tide detergent and Dawn dish soap on kitchen counter, highlighting Procter & Gamble consumer staples stock.

Summary

  • Procter & Gamble’s stock appears to have bottomed in early 2026, trading at long-term lows with a resilient business capable of sustaining dividends and capital returns.
  • As a Dividend King, PG offers a nearly 3% yield backed by nearly 70 years of distribution increases and a healthy balance sheet.
  • Recent earnings and share buybacks support a rebound thesis, with analysts reverting to a more bullish stance and institutional ownership rising.

Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) appears to have bottomed in early 2026, and its stock is positioned to advance significantly over the coming years.

The market has priced the company for a worst-case scenario: tepid growth. That lower expectation, however, is already reflected in the stock price — and modest growth is sufficient to sustain P&G's financial health and its ability to pay dividends.

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Trading near long-term lows and the low end of its historical valuation range, PG currently offers an above-average dividend yield of roughly 2.9%.

That represents a reliable 2.9% yield with an expectation of distribution growth, since this is a Dividend King.

Procter & Gamble (PG) stock chart shows bottoming near support as EMAs, stochastics and MACD improve.

Dividend Aristocrats and Kings have long track records of paying and increasing distributions. Those payouts aren't indestructible, but they are supported by blue‑chip quality businesses, steady cash flow, and solid balance sheets that help sustain dividend payments through market downturns.

Dividends matter to many investors — especially buy-and-hold compounders — because reinvestment can amplify distribution growth over time. Procter & Gamble has increased its payout for nearly 70 consecutive years, maintains a relatively low payout ratio given its history, and entered 2026 with a mid-single-digit compound annual growth rate in distributions. The opportunity is to build a position over time, using targets such as the recent price floor near $140 and common technical triggers like moving averages and prior support and resistance.

Procter & Gamble Triggers Rebound With Q2 FY2026 Release

Procter & Gamble's Q2 fiscal 2026 earnings report wasn't flashy but it underscored a resilient consumer staples franchise capable of sustaining capital returns. Reported revenue rose 1% — largely impacted by foreign exchange — with a 1% volume decline offset by 1% pricing gains at the core level. Beauty and Healthcare were the standouts, each growing 5%, while most other segments showed modest gains. Baby, Feminine & Family Care was the lone soft spot, down 3% versus tough prior-year comparisons that were affected by pantry-loading ahead of a potential port strike.

Margins and guidance were acceptable. Adjusted EPS fell about 2% (net of FX), but the market had feared a worse outcome. Adjusted earnings of $1.88 topped expectations despite the tepid top line, supporting the company's outlook for capital returns. Management reaffirmed its full-year growth and earnings guidance, projecting a midpoint of $6.96 — in line with analyst consensus.

Procter & Gamble Share Buybacks Provide Leverage for Investors

P&G's cash flow supports both dividends and share repurchases, which adds upside to potential stock gains over time. Q2 FY2026 buybacks reduced the share count by about 1.4% year-to-date, and repurchases are expected to continue at a meaningful pace. Balance-sheet highlights include higher cash and current and total assets, a roughly 2% increase in equity, and low leverage, with long-term debt near 0.5x equity.

Analysts and institutional activity further support a rebound. While analysts trimmed price targets in 2025, they still rate the stock a Moderate Buy and moved to a more bullish stance in early 2026. They see roughly 10% upside from a key resistance area near a major moving average. Institutional investors — who own more than 65% of the company — accumulated shares through 2025 and continued buying into the first weeks of 2026.


 

 
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