Church & Dwight (NYSE: CHD)
Church & Dwight Return vs. S&P
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Church & Dwight Company Info
Church & Dwight Co., Inc. engages in the development, manufacture, and marketing of household, personal care, and specialty products. It operates through the following segments: Consumer Domestic, Consumer International, Specialty Products, and Corporate. The Consumer Domestic segment offers household products, such as laundry detergents, fabric softener sheets, cat litter, and household cleaning products, and personal care products including antiperspirants, oral care products, depilatories, reproductive health products, oral analgesics, nasal saline moisturizers, and dietary supplements. The Consumer International segment sells personal care products, household and over-the-counter products in Canada, France, Australia, China, the United Kingdom, Mexico, and Brazil. The Specialty Products segment consists of sales to businesses which participated in different product areas, namely animal productivity, specialty chemicals, and specialty cleaners. The Corporate segment includes equity in earnings of affiliates from Armand and ArmaKleen in 2021, 2020 and 2019. The company was founded by Dwight John and Austin Church in 1846 and is headquartered in Ewing, NJ.
News & Analysis
Church & Dwight is Down 20% From Its High. Time to Buy?
Having lost a material amount of value, is this consumer staples maker with a modest 1.3% yield worth buying?
Buy the Dip on This Dividend Aristocrat
Take advantage of a frightened stock market and load up on this stock.
This Dividend Aristocrat Has a Lot of Growth Left
Church & Dwight has proven to be one of the best capital allocators in the market.
Why Church & Dwight Stock Rocketed Nearly 25% Higher in July
Church & Dwight had a gangbuster of a month, capped off with a great earnings report. But don't get too excited.
3 Best Consumer Staples Stocks to Buy In May
The sector is in its element, so to speak, but a trio of names looks perfectly suited for the post-COVID-19 environment.
The "Inverted Yield Curve" Is Signaling a Recession; These Stocks Could Weather the Storm
Dividend stocks tend to be more recession-resistant, but some non-dividend-paying growth stocks also performed well during the Great Recession.
Why Glu Mobile, Opko Health, and Church & Dwight Slumped Today
Despite a solid upward move for the stock market, these companies lagged behind.
Why Church & Dwight Stock Rose 11% Last Month
Shares of the Arm & Hammer parent moved higher on an impressive earnings report.
Valuation
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