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…