Procter & Gamble is selling diapers made with silk fibers in China as it leans into luxury

Procter & Gamble is selling diapers made with silk fibers in China as it leans into luxury


Packages of Pampers diapers are displayed at a Target store on June 05, 2025 in Novato, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Procter & Gamble is selling diapers made with silk fibers in China as part of the company’s strategy to entice shoppers to spend more, even as demand for some of its products wanes.

China is the company’s second-largest market, trailing only the United States. In both markets, P&G has turned to innovation, rather than discounts, to attract consumers who are otherwise trying to spend less at the grocery store. For example, last year, it unveiled a new formula for its liquid Tide detergent in the U.S.

In China, P&G also faces another challenge: a record-low birth rate. Government data released on Monday showed that births dropped to 5.6 per 1,000 people in 2025, down from 6.4 in 2023.

For P&G, fewer babies means that the company is selling fewer diapers. To boost the sales of its baby care division, P&G is leaning into luxury.

Executives touted the success of the Pampers Prestige product on the company’s earnings conference call on Thursday. It added silk fibers to the inside of the diaper for skin comfort and protection.

“Chinese parents want only the best for their baby,” P&G CEO Shailesh Jejurikar said.

He added that “reframing” the company’s super-premium diaper line has fueled double-digit organic sales growth and a 3% market share increase for P&G’s baby care business in Greater China over the last 18 months. The company did not share how the pricing of Pampers Prestige compares to its other diaper lines in China.

In the latest quarter, P&G’s overall baby care division reported single-digit organic sales declines, despite a 20% jump in organic sales in Greater China, according to CFO Andre Schulten.

More broadly, the focus on innovation is paying off for P&G. Consumer sentiment in China is still negative, yet P&G saw 3% growth in the market in the latest quarter, Schulten said on a call with press on Thursday.

Stateside, P&G’s sales were weaker. Organic sales in North America fell 2% in its fiscal second quarter. P&G is hoping that the strategy that is working in China could soon pay off in the U.S.

The current bifurcated — or “K-shaped” — economy has showed that wealthier Americans are still willing to flex their purchasing power, even as lower-income shoppers pull back.

Shares of P&G rose more than 2% in morning trading on Thursday after the company reported better-than-expected earnings. However, the company’s revenue fell short of Wall Street’s expectations, hurt by weaker demand in the U.S.



Source

Oil giant Shell to buy Canada’s ARC Resources for .4 billion in push to boost output
World

Oil giant Shell to buy Canada’s ARC Resources for $16.4 billion in push to boost output

The Shell gas station logo is displayed on February 13, 2025 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell | Getty Images News | Getty Images British oil major Shell on Monday said it agreed a deal to buy Canadian energy company ARC Resources in an output-boosting deal valued at $16.4 billion. The transaction will add roughly 370,000 […]

Read More
China’s tech play, U.S. high yield & own equities — 3 investment strategies from the studio
World

China’s tech play, U.S. high yield & own equities — 3 investment strategies from the studio

Markets are seeing a tepid start to trade in Europe, as investors digest the latest developments in the Iran war. Anticipation is also building ahead of major earnings this week, including five of the “Magnificent Seven,” as well as rate decisions from the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, the ECB and the Bank of […]

Read More
United Airlines CEO confirms he approached American Airlines about merger
World

United Airlines CEO confirms he approached American Airlines about merger

United Airlines CEO confirms he approached American Airlines about merger Source

Read More