Stock Markets January 27, 2026

Kimberly-Clark Tops Profit Estimates as Cost Cuts and Essential Goods Lift Margins

Cost controls, portfolio pruning and steady demand for diapers, tissues and cleaning supplies underpin quarterly outperformance

By Sofia Navarro KMB
Kimberly-Clark Tops Profit Estimates as Cost Cuts and Essential Goods Lift Margins
KMB

Kimberly-Clark reported adjusted earnings per share above Street estimates, supported by expense reductions, the sale of lower-margin units and continued consumer demand for essential household items sold in larger, value-oriented packs. While revenue was marginally below expectations, the company posted steady adjusted gross margins and outlined a growth and margin expansion outlook for 2026, alongside a proposed transformational acquisition.

Key Points

  • Kimberly-Clark beat adjusted EPS estimates with $1.86 versus a $1.81 consensus, while net sales of $4.08 billion were slightly below expectations.
  • Company actions - including job cuts and sales of lower-margin businesses such as private-label diapers and PPE - helped protect margins as it expands affordable product lines.
  • Volume growth of 2.7% and consumer purchases of larger value packs at warehouse-style club stores supported a 2.1% rise in organic sales despite a 1.1% decline in prices.

Kimberly-Clark reported quarterly results that beat profit expectations, helped by a combination of cost reductions and ongoing consumer purchases of core products such as Huggies diapers and Kleenex tissues. The Dallas-headquartered company, which saw its shares decline roughly 23% during 2025, traded up about 2% in pre-market activity after the results.

Management has taken steps in recent months to tighten its cost base and reshape its portfolio. Those moves include workforce reductions and the disposal of lower-margin and non-essential businesses, specifically its private-label diaper operations and personal protective equipment segments. Executives say the actions have helped protect margins while the company pushes deeper into more affordable product ranges and introduces lower-priced items that retain premium features to compete for budget-conscious shoppers.

For the fourth quarter, Kimberly-Clark reported that average selling prices declined 1.1% while organic sales increased 2.1%. The volume metric was a brighter spot, rising 2.7% overall as consumers purchased larger, value-pack formats of essential items - including surface cleaning agents, disinfectants and paper napkins - at warehouse-style club stores.

The company recorded an adjusted gross margin of 37%, effectively flat with the prior year, despite earlier warnings from Kimberly-Clark that steep U.S. import duties - particularly on goods from China - could weigh on profitability. Adjusted earnings per share for the quarter ended December 30 came in at $1.86, ahead of analysts' estimates of $1.81 based on LSEG-collected data. Reported net sales for the period were $4.08 billion, narrowly missing consensus expectations of $4.09 billion.

The quarterly results arrive after a comparable consumer-goods peer, Procter & Gamble, also reported profits above expectations last week even as revenue came in slightly below forecasts.

Looking ahead, Kimberly-Clark expects 2026 organic sales to be at least in line with - or to outpace - the roughly 2% average growth observed across the categories and markets in which it competes. Management is guiding for adjusted earnings per share to grow at a double-digit pace, driven in part by further efficiency gains that should allow margin expansion.

In a separate strategic move, the company has proposed acquiring consumer health company Kenvue - the maker of Tylenol - in a transaction valued at more than $40 billion. Kimberly-Clark has stated it expects the deal to close by year-end, which would create a larger global consumer health business.


Context and market reaction

Investors appeared to respond positively to the beat on adjusted EPS and the margin resilience reported for the quarter, reflected in the modest pre-market share uptick. The combination of portfolio pruning, price management and volume growth in bulk retail channels appears to have helped offset tougher cost dynamics cited by the company.

Risks

  • Steep U.S. import duties, particularly on goods from China, were previously cited by the company as a factor that could erode profitability - a risk for the consumer staples sector and companies reliant on global supply chains.
  • Net sales narrowly missed expectations, indicating potential revenue pressure even as margins held steady - a risk for investor sentiment in consumer staples and packaged-goods markets.

More from Stock Markets

Australian Shares Finish Higher as Gold, IT and Mining Stocks Lead Gains Feb 3, 2026 Global Consultancies Adopt Riskier Workarounds in China Amid Sanctions and New Data Rules Feb 3, 2026 Indian equities rally after U.S. agrees tariff reductions in trade accord Feb 2, 2026 SiTime Nears Acquisition of Renesas Timing Business in Potential $3 Billion Deal Feb 2, 2026 Tesla Debuts New All-Wheel Drive Model Y Trim in U.S.; Premium Option Also Launched Feb 2, 2026