Deutz’s Engine Roars in Q1 but the Dividend Axe and Overbought Pain Pull the Stock Back to Earth
17.05.2026 - 08:02:34 | boerse-global.de
The Cologne-based engine maker Deutz delivered a blockbuster first quarter, but the market response was anything but celebratory. Shares slipped below the €10 mark on Friday, closing at €9.91, as the stock traded ex-dividend for the first time and ran into a technical overbought signal. Investors who held through the cut-off will receive the €0.18 per share payout on Tuesday, but the immediate price adjustment, combined with a relative strength index that had hit 83, proved too heavy a drag to ignore.
Orders and Margins Fire on All Cylinders
Behind the stock’s short-term weakness, the operational picture is strikingly strong. Order intake surged 41% in the first quarter to €771 million, while revenue climbed to €530 million. The adjusted operating margin improved to exactly 7.0%, with earnings before interest and taxes reaching €37.3 million. Net profit swung to €21.5 million from a loss in the same period last year, underscoring the turnaround underway at the company.
Management is steering the group toward a leaner, more diversified future. A cost-cutting programme is on track to shave €50 million off the expense base by year-end, and the full-year revenue target is pegged at up to €2.5 billion. The new business segments — energy and defence — are central to the strategy, reducing reliance on conventional combustion engines. By 2030, Deutz aims to double revenue to roughly €4 billion and achieve a double-digit operating margin.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Deutz AG?
Analyst Confidence and a New Leadership Role
The strategic pivot has drawn upbeat commentary from analysts. Berenberg raised its price target to €13.00 with a buy recommendation, while the DZ Bank also sees the stock trading well below its fair value. Should the share price hold the 50-day moving average — where it landed after the dividend adjustment — the previous yearly high of €12.46 could come back into view.
To drive the transformation, Deutz is expanding its board. Katharina Krüger will assume the newly created role of Chief Transformation Officer in June, a move that signals the company’s commitment to executing its 2030 roadmap.
Despite Friday’s drop, the stock has still gained nearly 39% over the past twelve months. The fundamental story remains intact, but the combination of a dividend technical and an overheated chart has given short-term traders a reason to step back. For long-term holders, the operational run-rate and analyst targets suggest the pullback may be just a breather in a longer climb.
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