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
Nov 22 PG Procter & Gamble “stays the course”, say Deutsche Bank, Jefferies analysts
Nov 22 CL Colgate-Palmolive Company (CL) Reports Strong Q3 Growth and Revises 2024 Outlook
Nov 22 PG Procter & Gamble’s (PG) Resilient Profit and Revised Forecast for 2025
Nov 22 PG Procter & Gamble doubles down on China’s TikTok to reverse sales slump
Nov 22 UL Unilever CEO says will slim down, not spin off food business - FT
Nov 22 HELE Helen of Troy: Cheap, But Questions Linger Amid Olive & June Acquisition
Nov 22 HELE HELE's Olive & June Buyout to Boost Its Presence in the Beauty Space
Nov 22 CL Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE:CL) Has Some Way To Go To Become A Multi-Bagger
Nov 22 HELE Olive & June to be acquired by Hydro Flask owner for $240M
Nov 21 HELE Helen of Troy Acquires Olive & June for $240 Million
Nov 21 PG Procter & Gamble sees long-term organic sales growth beating market average
Nov 21 HELE Helen of Troy signs agreement to acquire Olive & June
Nov 21 HELE Helen of Troy Limited Announces Agreement to Acquire Olive & June, LLC
Nov 21 PG Procter & Gamble continues gains for seven straight sessions
Nov 21 UL Unilever silent amid talk private-equity sale of ice cream off table
Nov 20 PG 11 Analysts Have This To Say About Procter & Gamble
Nov 20 UL Unilever ends plans to sell ice cream business to private equity - FT
Nov 20 PG Jim Cramer Says The Procter & Gamble Company (PG)’s ‘Got Insight In Everything From China To Raw Costs To Tariffs… I Love It’
Nov 20 PG Want Safe Dividend Income in 2024 and Beyond? Invest in the Following 3 Ultra-High-Yield Stocks.
Nov 19 CL Colgate's Tom's of Maine found to have sold toothpaste made with contaminated water
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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