BTI
$57.37-1.35 (-2.30%)
British American Tobacco p.l.c.
Historical Price
Peer Comparison
Whystock Valuation Model
Fundamentals
British American Tobacco p.l.c. provides tobacco and nicotine products to consumers in the Americas, Europe, the Asia-Pacific, the Middle East, Africa, and the United States. It offers vapour, heated, and modern oral nicotine products; combustible ci...
Recent News
A Look At British American Tobacco’s Valuation As Long Term Returns Draw Investor Interest
Why British American Tobacco is on investors’ radar With no single headline event driving attention today, interest in British American Tobacco (LSE:BATS) centers on how its current share price, recent returns and earnings profile line up for long term shareholders. See our latest analysis for British American Tobacco. Recent trading has been choppy, with a 1 day share price return of 1.01% and a 7 day share price return of 4.60% pulling the share price to £43.11. A 1 year total shareholder...
Are Consumer Staples Stocks Lagging Ahold (ADRNY) This Year?
Here is how Ahold NV (ADRNY) and British American Tobacco (BTI) have performed compared to their sector so far this year.
Trump appointee proposes ripping out the White House's 200-year-old columns for the flashier style found at Mar-a-Lago
That's just one line item on a White House renovation tab that critics say is ballooning well beyond what Americans were promised.
Philip Morris vs. British American Tobacco: Which Tobacco Giant Wins for Income Investors?
Philip Morris International (NYSE: PM) and British American Tobacco (NYSE: BTI) both just reported full-year 2025 results, and for income investors choosing between them, the contrast is sharper than it looks. One is executing a textbook transformation into smoke-free products. The other is cheaper, yields more, and just raised its dividend meaningfully. PM’s Smoke-Free Engine ... Philip Morris vs. British American Tobacco: Which Tobacco Giant Wins for Income Investors?
2 Big Tobacco Stocks to Buy Amid Recent Market Volatility: BTI, PM
Big tobacco stocks tend to be relatively attractive during recessions because demand for cigarettes is unusually stable, cash flows remain strong, and they attract investors with high dividend yields.