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This Week’s Exclusive Article
3 Consumer Staples Stocks Breaking Out This Month
Author: Dan Schmidt. Article Posted: 2/9/2026.
Quick Look
- Investors have started rotating out of volatile tech stocks and into safer assets.
- Consumer staples are often considered a ‘safe’ sector since its constituients sell necessities like food, household items, and hygiene products.
- These three consumer staples stocks appear to be on the verge of breaking out following a rough performance in 2025.
A rotation is underway as investors move away from tech in search of safer assets. AI hyperscalers are still reporting solid results, but even the Mag Seven stocks have pulled back after delivering impressive top- and bottom-line beats. Bold AI capital expenditure (CapEx) plans are increasingly met with skepticism rather than optimism, pushing the market toward a more risk-off stance where commodities and defensive sectors like consumer staples look increasingly attractive. If the tech rotation continues, the three stocks we discuss today combine upside potential with strong dividend income.
Rotation Into Consumer Staples Is Picking Up Steam
Nothing lasts forever in markets, and the AI trade is starting to wobble more noticeably than it has since the end of the Fed hiking cycle in 2022. AI bellwether NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been largely rangebound for six months, and Oracle Corp. (NYSE: ORCL) is down about 60% from its September all-time high. Mega-caps such as Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL) and Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) pulled back after earnings despite announcing 2026 CapEx plans of eye-popping scale. Data center growth takes time, and hyperscalers are competing for scarcer resources (for example, energy and memory).
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Investors are beginning to look for risk-off assets in case these bold plans fail to translate into profits. That said, the action in gold and silver over the past few weeks hardly reads like a classic flight to safety. Money may be flowing out of tech stocks, but it isn’t leaving the market entirely, as this post from Bloomberg’s Joe Weisenthal illustrates:
Consumer staples are not usually the target of speculative fervor, so large inflows likely indicate investors are taking risk off the table as speculative returns wane. These are defensive businesses with consistent, predictable sales that typically return a sizable portion of profits to shareholders. With cryptocurrencies under pressure and precious metals losing momentum, investors may be rotating into this sector next.
3 Breakout Consumer Staples Stocks With Strong Dividends
Predictability is a perk of value sectors like consumer staples, but it does not always mean sacrificing growth. The three stocks below are household names that suffered sizable drawdowns in 2025 and are now showing technical signs of breakout in 2026.
Procter & Gamble: Dividend King Makes Long-Awaited Technical Breakout
Procter & Gamble Co. (NYSE: PG) just posted its best month in nearly two years, gaining about 13% over the last 30 days. Margin improvement helped drive the move: the company generated 270 basis points of productivity savings in its fiscal Q2 2026 results, helping offset tariff headwinds. The stock also cleared a key technical hurdle, rising above the 200-day simple moving average (SMA) for the first time since early last year.
The company maintained its 2026 revenue guidance, which supports the case for another year of dividend increases from this Dividend King. P&G has raised its dividend for 70 consecutive years while allocating only about 62% of earnings and less than 50% of free cash flow to the payout. The company returned more than $4.8 billion to shareholders in Q2 alone, making PG an attractive place to hide from market volatility.
Reynolds Consumer Products: Mitigating Tariffs and Commodity Volatility
Reynolds Consumer Products Inc. (NASDAQ: REYN) jumped nearly 10% following its Q4 2025 earnings release on Feb. 4, driven largely by margin resilience amid tariffs and price increases. Aluminum—critical for Reynolds Wrap foil—has been a major concern, with the spot price up nearly 20% since last April. Despite that, Reynolds maintained 21% adjusted EBITDA margins on $220 million in earnings and posted a 3% year-over-year retail volume increase for Hefty products.
The daily chart is showing technical improvement, including a Golden Cross and support forming at the 200-day SMA. Reynolds offers a 4% dividend yield with a 63.9% dividend payout ratio. While it does not have the long history of increases that P&G does, Reynolds’ dividend behaves more like a bond and the company has room to sustain it, especially if aluminum price pressures ease.
Constellation Brands: Strong Earnings and Breakout Ease Beer-Slowdown Fears
Fears of declining beer sales weighed on Modelo and Pacifico parent Constellation Brands Inc. (NYSE: STZ), but the company beat expectations in its most recent quarter. Constellation reported fiscal Q3 2026 earnings last month: revenue declined nearly 10% year-over-year but came in above forecasts. Beer operating margins were better than expected, helping limit the damage, and the stock is up more than 15% since the Jan. 8 release.
Bullish momentum has been building in STZ since last November, and the stock has finally cleared the 200-day SMA after a long downtrend. Constellation looks like an intriguing value play, trading around 12 times forward earnings and 2.6 times sales. It uses roughly 12% of cash flow to cover its 2.46% dividend yield and has raised its payout for five consecutive years.
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