Detergent Stocks List

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

Detergent Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 UGP Here's Why Hold Strategy is Apt for Matador (MTDR) Stock Now
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 PG Gillette Venus Announces Ambassadors Ahead of the Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024
May 16 UGP Why Retain Strategy is Apt for Phillips 66 (PSX) Stock Now
May 15 PG Procter & Gamble's (PG) Focus on Productivity Plans Bodes Well
May 15 PG The 100-Year Quest to Make a Paper Bottle
May 14 PG Is Great Ajax Corp (NYSE:AJX) the Best High-Dividend Penny Stock to Buy Now?
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
May 14 PG P&G plans to downplay its corporate name in ads during Paris Olympics
May 14 PG P&G unveils plans to prominently feature superior performing brands during the Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024
May 14 PG This Super Safe Dividend King Just Hit an All-Time High for All the Right Reasons
May 14 PG That's Fairy Squeaking Clean! Fairy joins forces with Celebrity Chef Poh Ling Yeow to relaunch 30 Minute Miracle dishwashing tablets.
May 13 PG 2 Supercharged Dividend Stocks to Buy and Hold for Years
May 13 PG 3 Dow Dividend Stocks That Are No-Brainer Buys in May
May 11 PG Amid Nvidia Craze, Jim Cramer Sees A Chip Stock 'Not On Anyone's Radar' About To Break Out: Here's What He Said
May 11 PG 1 Magnificent Stock That Turned $10,000 Into $1.5 Million
Detergent

A detergent is a surfactant or a mixture of surfactants with cleaning properties in dilute solutions. These substances are usually alkylbenzenesulfonates, a family of compounds that are similar to soap but are more soluble in hard water, because the polar sulfonate (of detergents) is less likely than the polar carboxylate (of soap) to bind to calcium and other ions found in hard water.
In most household contexts, the term detergent by itself refers specifically to laundry detergent or dish detergent, as opposed to hand soap or other types of cleaning agents. Detergents are commonly available as powders or concentrated solutions. Detergents, like soaps, work because they are amphiphilic: partly hydrophilic (polar) and partly hydrophobic (non-polar). Their dual nature facilitates the mixture of hydrophobic compounds (like oil and grease) with water. Because air is not hydrophilic, detergents are also foaming agents to varying degrees.

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