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Procter & Gamble’s CFO says pricing power isn’t a given—here’s how the company plans to earn it



Good morning. For nearly two centuries, Procter & Gamble, home of Dawn dish soap, Tide detergent, Pampers diapers, and Gillette razors, has sold consumers the same basic promise: its products are worth a premium. The pitch has always been that better performance justifies a higher price.

However, after years of cumulative inflation, consumers are more price-sensitive, more willing to compare, and less reflexively loyal. Against that backdrop, P&G’s message is evolving.

“I don’t think we’ve lost pricing power,” P&G CFO Andre Schulten said on the company’s fiscal third-quarter earnings call on Friday. “I think pricing power has to be earned—and the way to earn it is to combine pricing with a truly delightful experience for the consumer.”

For the past few years, large consumer goods companies were able to push through price increases with limited resistance. That window is narrowing. From tariffs to commodities, costs are still rising, but consumers are no longer absorbing those increases as easily. The result is more of a balancing act: How do you protect margins without pushing shoppers away?

P&G, No. 51 on the Fortune 500, is emphasizing innovation over across-the-board price hikes. “Consumers respond well if we give them a truly better proposition in the categories we are in because they see there is upside,” said Schulten, who led the earnings call discussion and handled analyst questions.

That looks different depending on the product. For Tide, P&G recently introduced what it described as the biggest formula upgrade in 25 years, holding the price steady while improving performance. The result was mid-teens growth in one of its largest U.S. businesses, Schulten said. For other brands, that could mean two options for consumers: “either pick the innovation with a bit of pricing and the promise of better performance, or stick with what they know,” he said.

P&G’s results suggest the approach is working, so far. For the quarter, the company reported net sales of $21.2 billion, a 7% increase versus the prior year and well above Wall Street’s estimate of roughly $20.5 billion. Organic sales grew more than 3%, with gains across all 10 product categories and in every global region. Adjusted EPS of $1.59 topped the analyst consensus of $1.56.

But beneath the headline numbers, Schulten was candid about the tension P&G faces. Tariffs, higher commodity costs, and increased investments are expected to create a roughly $0.25-per-share headwind, pushing full-year EPS toward the lower end of its flat-to-4% growth guidance range. That cost pressure, he noted, is affecting the entire consumer goods sector. Schulten also warned that surging oil prices tied to the Middle East conflict are expected to create a roughly $150 million after-tax earnings hit in the fiscal fourth quarter and could balloon to about a $1 billion annual headwind in fiscal 2027.

The broader bet for P&G is that the fundamentals haven’t changed: trust, once earned through product performance, still translates into pricing power. But consumers now decide that one purchase at a time.

Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com

Leaderboard

David Duckworth was appointed interim CFO of Acadia Healthcare Company, Inc. (Nasdaq: ACHC), effective May 1. Duckworth succeeds Todd Young, who is departing from the company to pursue a CFO role at a private equity-backed animal health company. Young will remain with the company through April 30. Duckworth, a former CFO of Acadia, will serve in the interim role at least until the completion of the previously announced search for a permanent chief executive officer, which remains ongoing. 

John Spaid, EVP and CFO of National Health Investors, Inc. (NYSE: NHI) will retire effective July 1. Todd Siefert will become EVP of corporate finance, effective June 1, and he will succeed Spaid as CFO upon his retirement. Siefert brings more than 25 years of experience. He most recently served as CFO of Hillsboro Residential and before that as SVP of corporate finance and treasurer at Ryman Hospitality Properties, a publicly traded REIT. 

Big Deal

The average health benefit cost per employee is expected to top $18,500 this year, according to Mercer. The firm’s CFO Perspective on Health report is based on the perspectives of finance chiefs on the cost of health care.

About three-fourths of CFOs indicated health care costs are at least a top-five concern relative to other operating costs, and for 33%, they rank in the top three. Among smaller employers (fewer than 500 employees), 44% say health benefit cost is a top-three concern.

Only about one in four CFOs said that their organization was able to absorb the cost increases over the past two years without any of these business impacts. CFOs in the largest organizations (those with 5,000 or more employees) were only slightly more likely to report that health benefit cost growth has not impacted their business (33%).

The findings are based on a survey of 161 CFOs and other finance professionals, with 77% at companies with up to 4,999 employees, 18% at companies with 5,000–19,999 employees, and 7% with 20,000 or more employees.

Going deeper

“John Ternus, Apple’s new CEO, inherits a rebounding China business—and some messy headaches” is a Fortune article by Nicholas Gordon.

Gordon writes; “John Ternus, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering, takes over as CEO on Sept. 1, ending Tim Cook’s 15-year tenure at the top of the world’s most valuable consumer technology company. Apple’s presence with China is perhaps the defining relationship of the Tim Cook era.” Read more here. 

Overheard

“I try to have a work-life balance but it’s super hard. Weekdays are especially hard to disconnect so I try to disconnect at least one of the weekend days.”

—Kathryn Bricken, founder of Doughlicious, a multi-million-dollar sweet-treat brand, told Fortune in an interview. Bricken started over at age 50 and worked 20-hour days to build the cookie dough empire that produces more than a million cookie dough and gelato bites every single week.

The Fortune 500 CEO succession season belongs to the company veteran



The latest wave of new Fortune 500 CEOs points to a clear boardroom priority: executives who can execute immediately.

Dow, Apple, Best Buy, and Lululemon all announced succession moves over the last few weeks, offering a compressed view of how boards are recalibrating leadership for 2026. The pattern is striking. Between Apple’s John Ternus, Best Buy’s Jason Bonfig, and Dow’s Karen Carter, the successors bring a combined 80-plus years of internal experience, suggesting that the boardroom premium has shifted toward executives who understand how the company works, where decisions get stuck, which internal relationships matter, and how to push major changes through without wasting time on a three-month listening tour.

After CEO departures hit an eight-year high in 2025, boards leaned heavily on internal leadership benches. Russell Reynolds put internal appointments at 68% globally in 2025 and 73% in APAC, while Spencer Stuart found that 60% of S&P 1500 CEO appointments were internal.

This is the rise of the “lifer-integrator,” the newly favored CEO profile for a volatile operating environment. The model combines long tenure within one company with the credibility and executional reach to turn AI adoption, supply-chain redesign, automation, or capital-allocation priorities into enterprise-wide change.

Ternus is among the clearest examples. Apple’s next chapter depends on integrating custom chips, devices, AI features, and product ecosystems, and he has led the hardware organization at the center of that platform. Such leaders know the machinery from the inside and have had a hand in building the systems that now need to scale and adapt to what’s next. AI has only intensified this preference. 

That raises the bar for external candidates. Many internal contenders already have breadth, built across functions, geographies, products, and market cycles inside a single company. The tougher question for an outside hire is what portable capability they bring that the internal bench cannot supply. Lululemon shows where the external route still has force. Incoming CEO Heidi O’Neill oversaw Nike’s global consumer, product, and brand organization. That maps directly onto Lululemon’s current pressure points, with weaker U.S. sales, rising competition from Alo Yoga and Vuori, product missteps, founder pressure, and activist scrutiny. Lululemon wants Nike’s global sportswear machinery, including faster product cycles, sharper merchandising, broader category expansion, and a stronger link between brand heat and international growth.

Still, less than halfway through 2026, the next Fortune 500 CEO class is beginning to look like a referendum on experience earned inside the building.

Ruth Umoh
ruth.umoh@fortune.com

Smarter in seconds

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Stress signal. Meta executive says he gets stressed only five times a year and that it’s actually ‘a useful signal’

Leadership lesson

Bloom Energy CEO K.R. Sridhar on the best advice he received during a rough patch at the company: “Go to the floor and engage with the people, and learn from them what’s not working for them.”

News to know

The acting Attorney General said Sunday that the accused correspondents’ dinner gunman was likely targeting Trump and other senior officials. Fortune

​​John Ternus inherits a stronger China business but also pressure from Washington, Beijing, and less brand-loyal Chinese consumers. Fortune

Tech layoffs have topped 90,000 this year, but companies like Microsoft are using voluntary buyouts to cut costs with less disruption and reputational blowback. Fortune

A Times examination found that Elon Musk has drawn on his rocket company, SpaceX, for loans and financial support that benefited his other businesses. NYT

Ford CEO Jim Farley warned that automakers face three converging pressures that could threaten the industry’s survival. Fortune

OpenAI has poached several senior executives from Salesforce, Snowflake, and Palantir in recent weeks. CNBC

Meta employees are bracing for pending layoffs, describing the waiting period as “28 days of hell.” BI

Google plans to invest up to $40 billion in Anthropic to help the AI lab expand the computing power needed to run its models. FT

2026's Top Producers, numbers 275-176




Check out the initial reveal of the 28th edition of National Mortgage News’ Top Producer survey, in a year where falling rates helped industry-wide volume.

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Why Static Portfolios Fail When Risk Regimes Change



Why Static Portfolios Fail When Risk Regimes Change

Best Credit Cards For Purchases at Office Supply Stores


Best Credit Cards For Office Supply Stores

Office supply stores such as Staples and Office Depot are quite popular as they sell a wide variety of office supplies, electronics, and other items.

If you often find yourself shopping at these stores, either for personal or business purchases, it’s best to use a credit card that earns the most rewards. So let’s take a look at the list below to see if you have one of the best credit cards for purchases at office supply stores. 

Also check out the best credit cards for:

We also have a tool that shows you the best credit card for purchases in popular categories. And now let’s get to the list below.

Chase Ink Business Plus/Bold

  • 5% cash back (or 5X Ultimate Rewards) at office supply stores on up to $50,000 in combined spending each year.



  • Annual Fee: $95



  • NOT AVAILABLE FOR NEW APPLICATIONS

Chase Ink Business Cash

  • 5% cash back (or 5X Ultimate Rewards) at office supply stores (and (and cell, landline, internet and cable services) on up to $25,000 in combined spending each year.



  • No Annual Fee



  • LEARN MORE

American Express SimplyCash Business Card

Huntington Voice Business Credit Card

  • 4% cash back on the first $7,000 you spend per quarter. You can choose one of ten categories each quarter, with one of them being office supply stores.



  • No Annual Fee



  • Read more about the card



  • APPLY HERE

Bank of America Business Advantage Customized Cash Rewards

  • 3% cash back in the category of your choice: office supply stores, gas stations and EV charging stations (default), , travel, TV/telecom & wireless, computer services or business consulting services. Max $50,000 per year.



  • No Annual Fee



  • Read more about the card



  • APPLY HERE

Huntington Voice Rewards Credit Card

  • 3% cash back on the first $2,000 you spend per quarter. You can choose one of ten categories each quarter, with one of them being office supply stores.



  • No Annual Fee



  • APPLY HERE

US Bank Altitude Reserve

Other 2% Cards

Cards with 5% Rotating Categories

Some cards also have 5% rotating categories each quarter, which could at times make them some of the best credit cards for restaurants. Sometimes we see restaurants as one of those categories, so it’s a good idea to keep an eye out if you have these cards, and maximize the spending when possible.



Please let me know if there’s any other cards that you think should be included in the list, especially if they’re widely available. And also share your opinions on which is the best credit cards for office supply store purchases.

Jyske Bank buys back 68,843 shares in week 17




Jyske Bank buys back 68,843 shares in week 17

Inside China’s plans to fight in space


Chinese public statements do not spell out military goals in the domain as bluntly as the US’s — Beijing’s 2022 white paper on its space programme emphasises the country’s peaceful approach. But the papers by PLA-affiliated scientists reveal a research and development push in many of the technologies needed for military operations in space. PLA textbooks also discuss in striking detail how China might fight an orbital war.

A doctrine shaped by vulnerability

Fears about the weaponisation of space can be traced back to the development of intercontinental ballistic missiles in the 1950s, which travel through space on their way to a target.

As early as 1996, General Joseph Ashy, the then commander-in-chief of the North American Aerospace Defense Command and Air Force Space Command, said: “It’s politically sensitive, but it’s going to happen . . . we’re going to fight in space.”

Thirty years on, the US and China are in a race to prepare for such a conflict. Both are motivated by the fear that a single strike in space could shut off the central nervous system their economies and militaries rely on.

Communications, power grids, navigation systems and financial markets would all collapse without signals relayed by satellites. Equally, modern militaries rely heavily on space for command and control, communications and missile targeting.

Under the US’s Joint All-Domain Command and Control concept, data from sensors across the country’s forces is supposed to be shared over a single network, with intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance satellites playing a key role. That raises the risk that a targeted strike could cripple its surveillance and command systems.

Howard Wang, a researcher at the Washington-based think-tank Rand, says the core concept of the PLA’s strategy is to strike key nodes in an adversary’s network to “paralyse” decision-making across the chain, from collecting and transmitting data to analysing and acting on it.

China’s drive to build up its military capacity in space also comes from a sense of threat. The country’s space programme is an attempt to counter what it sees as the US’s military advantage in the domain, just as it modernised and expanded its nuclear arsenal partly out of fear that it could be neutralised by US missile defence.

In a 2021 submission to the UN, the Chinese government said the “weaponisation” of space and an arms race in orbit were “becoming more prominent and pressing”. It accused “a certain country” of pursuing military superiority in space and said the US was accelerating “the building up of a combat system in outer space in a bid to get ready for a space war”.

China has been developing its own capabilities in response.

In January 2022, China’s Shijian-21 satellite — officially launched to test capabilities to remove debris — used a robotic arm to tow a defunct Beidou navigation satellite into graveyard orbit. US generals were alarmed by Beijing’s ability to seize a satellite in geostationary orbit (GEO) — some 36,000km from Earth — and to dispose of it several hundred kilometres above that.

A year later, the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence warned that such displays “prove China’s ability to operate future space-based counterspace weapons”.

In 2024, five Chinese experimental satellites, three of the Shiyan-24C type and two others called Shijian-6 05A and B, conducted a series of close-range manoeuvres — the behaviour the US likened to dogfighting.

Data from Comspoc, a space analytics company, shows another test in June, when two Chinese satellites took part in a “rendezvous operation” in GEO that may have been the first of its kind.

US homebuilders stare down another ‘lost’ year as war, tariffs bite


Analysts at Barclays said the sector is risking another “lost year,” with elevated inventories and incentives eating into profitability.

War, oil and a faltering spring

The US–Israel war with Iran, which broke out on February 28, pushed oil above $100 a barrel and helped nudge the average 30‑year mortgage rate back into the mid‑6% range, after a brief dip below 6% in late February.

The conflict adds a fresh layer of uncertainty for buyers already wary of prices and job security, with survey data suggesting many households delayed big‑ticket purchases such as homes.

“Geopolitical tensions, higher rates, and broader economic uncertainty are weighing on consumers ⁠in a vital period of the spring selling season,” Barclays analyst Matthew Bouley said.

Wells Fargo analyst Sam Reid noted that housing stocks lagged the S&P 500 since the start of the war, while Evercore ISI’s Stephen Kim called this year’s spring season “disappointing” compared with 2024 and 2025.

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