When a luxury car stock is priced like a cyclical, but pays you 5% to wait

On the surface, this European premium automaker looks like just another victim of the EV transition and Chinese competition: revenue has only slipped modestly in recent years, but operating profit is down by almost a third and return on sales has fallen from a comfortable 12–13% to about 8.1% as electrification costs, discounting, fleet sales and tariffs chew through what used to be a textbook luxury margin. Underneath that, however, you have a balance sheet and cash‑flow profile that doesn’t look like a struggling mass‑market OEM at all: in 2024 the group generated about €9.2 billion of free cash flow from its industrial business, maintained industrial net liquidity above €31 billion, proposed a dividend of €4.30 per share (roughly a 5–6% yield at today’s price) and approved a share‑buyback programme of up to €5 billion over 24 months.

The valuation reflects the earnings slump more than the cash engine. On current numbers the stock trades at roughly 10× earnings, with a price‑to‑sales…

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The information in this article is for educational purposes only and does not serve as investment advice. The authors present only facts known to them and do not draw any conclusions or recommendations for readers. Read our Terms and Conditions
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