BMW’s Robotic Ambition Collides With 30% Stock Rout as Citigroup Hammers Target
13.06.2026 - 16:58:29 | boerse-global.de
The Bavarian automaker is pushing ahead with a futuristic robot pilot at its Leipzig plant, yet its share price is stuck firmly in the past. BMW shares closed Friday at €67.40, dragging year?to?date losses to nearly 30%, after touching a fresh 2026 trough of €65.52 just a day earlier. The clash between long?term innovation and immediate market reality could hardly be sharper.
Citigroup turns more cautious
A major US bank added to the pressure on Friday by slashing its price target on BMW from €86 to €73, though it kept a neutral rating. The move reflects a toxic mix of tariff?driven margin erosion and deepening weakness in China, the company’s single largest market. Shares now trade barely above their yearly low, with the 200?day moving average sitting more than 20% above current levels — a clear sign of a sustained downtrend.
Tariffs and China crunch the numbers
The fundamental headwinds are tangible. BMW’s core automotive margin landed at just 5.0% in the first quarter of 2026, with higher tariffs eating away 1.25 percentage points of profitability. In China, deliveries slumped 10% year?on?year, even as the overall Chinese auto market shrank even more sharply. Group revenues came in at roughly €31 billion.
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Despite the strain, management has held its full?year guidance: an operating margin of between 4% and 6%, sales volumes matching last year’s level, and a moderate decline in pre?tax profit.
Humanoid robots enter the assembly line
Against this bleak financial backdrop, BMW is pressing ahead with its factory of the future. Starting in summer 2026, the Leipzig plant will begin a pilot phase integrating humanoid robots from Hexagon Robotics — called the AEON series — into series production. The machines will handle monotonous, physically demanding tasks such as assembling high?voltage batteries. Crucially, the robots are designed to learn from human operators and then share that knowledge across all units. Plant manager Petra Peterhänsel insists the technology will not cost jobs. Instead, she argues, it will relieve workers and improve quality control.
Technical picture offers a glimmer
From a technical perspective, the stock looks deeply stretched. The relative strength index (RSI) has dropped to 25.1, a level that typically signals extreme overselling. Such readings have historically preceded short?term bounces. For that to happen, however, the share price must first hold above the recent low of €65.52. A decisive break below that level would open the door to a further leg lower.
Whether the market will digest Citigroup’s sharp target cut quickly or dwell on the fundamental challenges remains to be seen — but the next few trading sessions will be critical.
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