Deodorant Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Deodorant stocks.

Deodorant Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 CHD Church & Dwight files automatic mixed shelf
May 17 HELE Zacks Industry Outlook Highlights Estee Lauder, Coty, Helen of Troy and European Wax Center
May 16 CL Oil prices steady, set for mild weekly gains amid demand hopes
May 16 CL Looking for a Growth Stock? 3 Reasons Why Colgate-Palmolive (CL) is a Solid Choice
May 16 UL Ben & Jerry’s owner to keep making Soviet-style ice cream despite pressure to quit Russia
May 16 PG Procter & Gamble Stock Has Broken Out (Technical Analysis)
May 16 PG Healthy consumer evidence in earnings calls from PG, MA, DAL, NKE and others - Goldman Sachs
May 16 HELE 4 Cosmetics Stocks Worth Watching Despite Industry Headwinds
May 16 PG Gillette Venus Announces Ambassadors Ahead of the Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024
May 15 UL Unilever goes ex dividend tomorrow
May 15 CL Procter & Gamble's (PG) Focus on Productivity Plans Bodes Well
May 15 PG Procter & Gamble's (PG) Focus on Productivity Plans Bodes Well
May 15 HELE Helen of Troy's (HELE) Brands Aid Amid Pressured Spending
May 15 PG The 100-Year Quest to Make a Paper Bottle
May 14 UL Questor: Play the long game by investing in this consumer goods supplier
May 14 PG Is Great Ajax Corp (NYSE:AJX) the Best High-Dividend Penny Stock to Buy Now?
May 14 CL Pilgrim's Pride (PPC) Up More Than 40% in 6 Months: Here's How
May 14 PG The Procter & Gamble Company (PG) Goldman Sachs Global Staples Forum (Transcript)
May 14 PG Pampers Launches New Swaddlers 360 Diapers with the Trusted Softness and Skin Protection of Swaddlers, and Now with a Pull-On Waistband for Easy Changes
May 14 PG Chart Advisor: Procter & Gamble Breaking Out
Deodorant

A deodorant is a substance applied to the body to prevent or mask body odor due to bacterial breakdown of perspiration in the armpits, groin, and feet, and in some cases vaginal secretions. A subclass of deodorants, called antiperspirants, prevents sweating itself, typically by blocking sweat glands. Antiperspirants are used on a wider range of body parts, at any place where sweat would be inconvenient or unsafe, since unwanted sweating can interfere with comfort, vision, and grip (due to slipping). Other types of deodorant allow sweating but prevent bacterial action on sweat, since human sweat only has a noticeable smell when it is decomposed by bacteria.
In the United States, the Food and Drug Administration classifies and regulates most deodorants as cosmetics but classifies antiperspirants as over-the-counter drugs.The first commercial deodorant, Mum, was introduced and patented in the late nineteenth century by an inventor in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Edna Murphey. The product was briefly withdrawn from the market in the US. The modern formulation of the antiperspirant was patented by Jules Montenier on January 28, 1941. This formulation was first found in "Stopette" deodorant spray, which Time magazine called "the best-selling deodorant of the early 1950s".There is a popular myth that deodorant use is linked to breast cancer, but research has shown no such link exists.

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