OMV Petrom has given the green light to build three wind farms in Romania with a combined capacity of 305 megawatts, marking a concrete step in the Austrian energy group’s pivot toward renewables. The final investment decision comes as OMV prepares to release first-quarter earnings on April 30, with expectations for a sharp profit jump clouded by operational headwinds and cautious analyst calls.
The Romanian wind projects, developed jointly with Renovatio, represent roughly 300 megawatts of the more than 1,100 megawatts OMV Petrom currently has under development across solar, wind, and hydropower. Franck Neel, the board member overseeing gas and power, framed the move as a shift from planning to execution. The initiative aligns with OMV’s broader ambition to transform from an oil, gas, and chemicals group into a provider of sustainable fuels and materials, targeting carbon neutrality across all three scopes by 2050.
Yet the market’s attention is equally fixed on near-term earnings pressures. Analysts polled by consensus expect first-quarter earnings per share of €1.32, nearly triple the €0.44 recorded a year earlier, on revenue of roughly €7.76 billion — a 25 percent increase. Those headline numbers, however, mask significant drags. Disrupted crude oil flows linked to the Middle East conflict triggered one-off hedging losses of around €100 million. The fuels segment absorbed another €150 million hit from lower retail margins and planned refinery outages. Production slipped sequentially to 288,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, while the profit margin per barrel collapsed from €10.76 to €6.65.
Two prominent investment banks have responded by trimming their outlooks. RBC Capital Markets downgraded OMV to “Underperform” with a price target of €46, citing persistent overcapacity in the chemicals sector and the group’s increased exposure to its new chemicals joint venture, Borouge Group International (BGI), in a challenging market. The bank cut its 2026 earnings forecast by 15 percent. Barclays analyst Ramachandra Kamath lowered his first-quarter operating profit estimate by roughly 14 percent and reduced his 2026 earnings per share projection from €7.29 to €6.72, maintaining an “Underweight” rating with a €52 price target.
Both targets sit well below OMV’s current share price of €58.55. The stock has climbed about 21 percent since the start of the year, though it remains roughly seven percent below its 52-week high from April.
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At the heart of analyst skepticism is BGI, the world’s largest pure-play polyolefin producer formed by merging Borouge Plc, Borealis, and NOVA Chemicals. Management expects the joint venture to contribute a steady quarterly earnings boost of around €140 million from the second quarter onward, with annual EBITDA synergies exceeding $500 million — 75 percent of that targeted within the first three years. But the planned initial public offering of BGI on the Abu Dhabi Stock Exchange has been postponed to 2027 due to market volatility, halving OMV’s dividend income from the venture to $250 million for 2026. Whether the synergy targets can be achieved amid global chemical overcapacity remains the central question for skeptics.
The underlying financial picture remains solid. OMV posted adjusted operating earnings of €4.6 billion last year, with net debt at a manageable €3.2 billion. The board has proposed a dividend of €4.40 per share for the 2025 financial year, including a special dividend of €1.25, subject to shareholder approval at the annual general meeting on May 27. The ex-dividend date is June 8.
On the leadership front, Emma Delaney is set to take over as chief executive from Alfred Stern on September 1, 2026, while CFO Reinhard Florey will remain in post for another two years.
The April 30 earnings release will test whether the one-off operational charges have eaten into the expected profit surge — and whether BGI is already delivering on its promises or remains a promise deferred.
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