The timing could hardly be more precarious. Mutares shares have slumped to a 52-week low, shedding roughly 21 percent since the start of the year, and on April 28 the Munich-based holding company will deliver two critical events in a single day: the release of its fully audited 2025 annual report and the settlement of new shares from its rights issue.
For the first time, shareholders will be able to scrutinise the covenant metrics that triggered a breach of the net debt-to-equity ratio agreed in the company’s bond terms. The violation stemmed from valuation effects, weaker value-accretive transactions in the fourth quarter of 2025, and a sharp rise in leasing liabilities. Bondholders granted a waiver, buying the group some breathing room, but the underlying structural issue remains unresolved.
Debt Reduction Roadmap Comes Into Focus
Management has now laid out a concrete repayment plan. By the end of 2026, the board aims to cut outstanding bond volumes to a maximum of €300 million. Starting from the second quarter, the company intends to repurchase at least €25 million worth of bonds each quarter.
The holding’s net profit climbed to a solid €130 million last year, while preliminary group revenue rose to €6.5 billion. The auditor’s formal sign-off on those figures is expected alongside the annual report on April 28. Whether the deleveraging strategy is gaining traction will become clearer on May 12, when Mutares publishes its first-quarter results.
Portfolio Churn Accelerates on Both Sides of the Balance Sheet
Several divestments are already in motion. The sale of the inTime Group has been completed. Peugeot Motocycles is slated to go to its management team, while Relobus is earmarked for infrastructure investor Infracapital — both transactions are targeted for the second quarter of 2026.
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On the acquisition front, two Magna divisions are nearing closing. The European automotive lighting business, which generates around $235 million in annual revenue, will be folded into portfolio company Amaneos. The car-top systems unit, with roughly $85 million in sales, is being allocated to HiLo Group. Both deals remain subject to regulatory approvals but are expected to close in the second quarter.
The operational picture continues to show growth. The board is forecasting 2026 revenue in a range of €7.9 billion to €9.1 billion, up from last year’s €6.5 billion.
Dividend Uncertainty Hangs Over a Tumbling Share Price
At Friday’s close of €23.60 — exactly the 12-month nadir — the stock has lost roughly 26 percent over the past 30 days. Based on the last dividend payment of €2.00 per share, the implied yield stands at around 8.5 percent. But whether Mutares will declare a payout for the 2025 financial year, and at what level, rests entirely with the annual general meeting scheduled for July 3, 2026.
The company operates a two-tier dividend model combining a base payment with a performance-linked component tied to successful exits. How many disposals the group can complete before July remains an open question. If the AGM approves a distribution, the dividend deduction will occur on the first trading day after the meeting, with funds reaching shareholder accounts three business days later.
Management has expressed confidence that, thanks to already-signed acquisitions, the financial covenants will be back in compliance from the end of June. For now, all eyes are on April 28 — the day the audited numbers land and the market gets its first real test of whether the turnaround story holds up under scrutiny.
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