
Interparfums (IPAR), Leggett & Platt (LEG) and Utz Brands (UTZ) trade ex-dividend on 12/15/2025: IPAR will pay a $0.80 quarterly dividend on 12/31/25, LEG $0.05 on 1/15/26 and UTZ $0.063 on 1/2/26. Based on IPAR’s recent $82.84 share price, the ex-date should mechanically reduce IPAR by ~0.97%, with estimated one-day reductions of ~0.44% for LEG and ~0.64% for UTZ; annualized yields implied by the current payouts are roughly 3.86% (IPAR), 1.77% (LEG) and 2.58% (UTZ). The pieces note recent intraday gains (IPAR +1.3%, LEG +2.4%, UTZ +2.2%) and caution that dividend continuity depends on future company profitability and historical stability.
Interparfums (IPAR), Leggett & Platt (LEG) and Utz Brands (UTZ) all trade ex-dividend on 12/15/2025; IPAR will pay $0.80 on 12/31/25, LEG $0.05 on 1/15/26, and UTZ $0.063 on 1/2/26. Based on IPAR’s recent $82.84 price the report calculates a mechanical ex-date adjustment of ~0.97% for IPAR, with estimated single-day reductions of ~0.44% for LEG and ~0.64% for UTZ. The article annualizes the current payouts to implied yields of 3.86% for IPAR, 1.77% for LEG and 2.58% for UTZ, which frames the relative income contribution of each name going forward. Market reaction ahead of the ex-date was positive intraday with IPAR +1.3%, LEG +2.4% and UTZ +2.2%, suggesting short-term sentiment can offset the mechanical ex-dividend drop but may also introduce volatility around the open. The supplied sentiment and market-impact signals are neutral-to-low (market_impact_score 0.12), and the piece explicitly notes dividends are not guaranteed and should be assessed against historical stability charts. That caveat makes dividend continuity and underlying profitability the primary fundamental risk to monitor. For investors the key takeaway is the difference between a one-day mechanical price adjustment and longer-term dividend sustainability: IPAR’s higher implied yield makes it the most income-relevant of the three, while LEG’s and UTZ’s lower yields offer less immediate income and greater sensitivity to payout cuts. Investors should therefore treat the 12/15 ex-date as a technical event, perform dividend-history and profit-sustainability due diligence, and expect potential intraday moves that may exceed the mechanical adjustments.
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