Bayer has moved decisively to reshape its US glyphosate operations, folding the business into a newly created entity called Ruveon LLC. Based in St. Louis, the unit now handles pricing, production, and logistics across the American market. The move forms part of the group’s current five-year plan for its agriculture division, and observers view it as a structural prelude to something bigger.
Analysts at Berenberg and ODDO BHF have floated the idea of a partial carve-out, with Berenberg’s Sebastian Bray sketching a potential spin-off IPO for what he dubs “new Monsanto” — a blueprint reminiscent of BASF’s planned listing of its agribusiness unit in 2027. Deutsche Bank has already upgraded the stock on the back of this thinking, arguing that a corporate breakup is only a matter of time.
The restructuring narrative gained further traction after a landmark US Supreme Court ruling on June 25, which established that federal labelling requirements preempt state-level claims. That decision stripped the foundation from thousands of pending lawsuits alleging inadequate cancer warnings on glyphosate products. Two additional legal wins — the Durnell case and a remand in a Missouri settlement proceeding — have reinforced the view that litigation headwinds are receding.
Investment banks have responded with sharply higher price targets, though not all are equally enthusiastic. Goldman Sachs’ James Quigley lifted his target from €55 to €62.50 while maintaining a Buy rating, citing lower capital costs and a reduced discount on the pharma business. Virginie Boucher-Ferte at Deutsche Bank went further, raising the target from €45 to €60 and upgrading the stock from Hold to Buy, noting that glyphosate overhang is dissipating and operational focus is returning.
Berenberg’s Sebastian Bray, by contrast, increased his target from €40.50 to €55 but kept a Hold rating. His caution underscores that optimism is not universal. While Bray acknowledges the evolving legal backdrop and the potential for a partial IPO, he stops short of endorsing the stock at current levels.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Bayer?
The average target across 18 analysts now stands at €51.92, with a wide range from €40.50 to €65.00. The consensus call is “Outperform,” yet the average sits just below where the stock currently trades — a sign that some of the good news may already be priced in.
That rally has been spectacular by any measure. Over the past 30 days, Bayer shares have surged roughly 40%, hitting a 52-week high of €53.86 in early July. Year-to-date the gain is around 32%, while the 12-month advance tops 86%. On Wednesday, the stock eased 1.43% to €49.78 as investors booked some profits, and it was last seen at €50.34 — a fractional further decline.
Technical indicators flash warnings. The 14-day relative strength index stands at 72.3, firmly in overbought territory. The gap between the share price and its 50-day moving average has widened to an unusually large 26%, while annualised volatility hovers near 65%, underscoring the nervous trading environment.
Looking ahead, the next major catalyst lands on August 4, when Bayer reports second-quarter results. The earnings must substantiate the recent price explosion — a tough ask given the run-up. Equally important is the pending final approval hearing for the multibillion-dollar global glyphosate settlement, now scheduled for August 19, 2026, before a Missouri judge. Until that hearing passes, the legal framework remains the central uncertainty.
The analyst divergence captures exactly this tension: a stock that has been transformed by legal relief and structural ambition, yet must now prove that the elevation is sustainable.
Ad
Bayer Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Bayer Analysis from July 8 delivers the answer:
The latest Bayer figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Bayer investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from July 8.
Bayer: Buy or sell? Read more here...











