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2021 (May–Dec)
In May, Bayer sought preliminary approval for a ~$2bn framework to address future Roundup claims, though the judge raised issues and conditions [3]. That August, the company acquired Vividion Therapeutics for ~$1.5bn upfront with up to $2bn in total consideration, a move designed to strengthen its pharma discovery capabilities [21,23]. October and December brought a pair of U.S. Roundup jury verdicts in Bayer's favor (Clark, Stephens), offering episodic legal relief and brief positive momentum [12,13,1]. The company continued implementing and negotiating legacy Monsanto litigation agreements throughout the period [8].
The Monsanto and Roundup overhang still dominated market perception. Each favorable trial produced only temporary relief. The Vividion acquisition signaled a pivot toward rebuilding the pharma pipeline—constructive over the long term but not an immediate re-rating catalyst [21,8].
Price action remained range-bound through 2021, with episodic spikes on trial wins in October and December. These short-term relief rallies failed to sustain as long-term litigation remained unresolved [13,12].
2022 (full year)
Litigation, appeals and settlement implementation under the legacy Monsanto and Roundup matters continued. Legal cashflow and liability modeling remained active in company disclosures [8]. Public shareholder debate intensified over strategy and leadership; in March, Union Investment publicly supported the CEO, signaling some large investors' preference for continuity over disruptive change [44].
The market narrative hardened around "value trapped by legal tail." Some investors defended management to avoid upheaval, while others viewed the group as underperforming and poorly optimized [8,44].
Price action was choppy and headline-driven. The stock remained range-bound without sustained breakout as legal uncertainty and mixed operational signals kept multiples anchored to historical impairment and legal legacy [5,8].
2023 (Jan–Jun) — Activism & CEO Change
January brought activist pressure from Bluebell and Inclusive Capital, catalyzing a major move with a report-driven rally of roughly +22% intraday on January 11 as break-up and value-unlock ideas surfaced [37,45]. On February 8, the supervisory board appointed outsider Bill Anderson as CEO, effective June 1—a clear governance catalyst [36]. Activists and institutional investors pushed for a strategic review of Consumer Health and portfolio options [37,39,45].
The narrative shifted from "value trap" to "value-unlock and turnaround," with the external CEO hire viewed as credible catalyst. Market expectations rose for strategic moves including divestments, cost cuts and a refocus on pharma [36,37].
A sharp breakout occurred in January on activism, followed by elevated volatility around the CEO appointment and transition. The market re-tested spike levels as investors awaited concrete action [37,36].
2023 H2 → 2024 (Execution & Restructuring)
Anderson launched structural changes and signaled cuts and management streamlining. Plans to cut management jobs were reported on September 14, 2023, as a prelude to wider overhaul [41]. Pipeline and R&D activity continued, with Vividion integration and program progression reported thereafter [26].
The narrative evolved to "turnaround in execution." Investors rewarded visible cost and organizational action but remained cautious given persistent litigation and capital allocation risks [41,26].
Post-spike consolidation took hold. The stock traded sideways to drifting higher as the market awaited execution, with headline trial and settlement items continuing to produce intraday gaps.
2024–2025 (Execution, Headline Legal Volatility)
Operational improvements, portfolio reviews and pipeline milestones continued. A simultaneous stream of Roundup trials and settlements produced mixed outcomes; the litigation docket remained a material, headline risk with frequent company updates and external verdicts [17,18]. Activist engagement remained an ongoing factor in governance and capital allocation debates [43].
The market split between bulls pointing to de-risking and improving operations, and bears highlighting the remaining legal tail and uncertain capital returns. The net narrative remained cautiously constructive but conditional on execution and final litigation resolution [18,17,43].
Gradual, headline-punctuated up and down moves characterized the period—a gentle upward drift at times but frequent headline-driven gaps. Volatility narrowed as some legal risks were resolved, though not eliminated [18,17].
2026 (to July 7)
On June 25, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the Durnell matter materially altered aspects of the U.S. litigation landscape in Monsanto and Roundup cases, changing the litigation profile as higher-court rulings and trial outcomes accumulated [18]. By mid-2026, the cumulative picture included a mix of settlements, jury awards and pending claims. The docket remained complex but some high-court rulings reduced tail risk; activist and ownership moves continued to influence governance dynamics [19,43].
By mid-2026 the narrative had shifted to "cautious optimism." Legal tail risk materially declined after higher-court developments, with investor focus shifting to execution, capital allocation and structural options including divestments and splits as the path to re-rating [18,19,43].
The chart profile from 2021 through mid-2026 shows an activism-driven spike in January 2023, followed by multi-period consolidation and retests, episodic headline gaps from trials and decisions, and stabilization near the ~50 area as legal uncertainty declined [18,19,37].
Bayer AG (BAYN.XETRA) operates across three life-sciences segments: Pharmaceuticals, Consumer Health, and Crop Science. The company competes against formidable integrated pharmaceutical players—Roche, Novartis, Sanofi, Johnson & Johnson—in drugs and diagnostics, and against global agriscience rivals like BASF and Corteva in seeds and crop protection. Private competitors including Syngenta and Boehringer Ingelheim also occupy adjacent spaces. Bayer's scale and portfolio breadth are genuine strengths, though the 2018 Monsanto acquisition introduced material legal, regulatory, and integration risks that persist, notably through ongoing Roundup litigation.
Bayer operates three distinct businesses—Pharmaceuticals, Consumer Health, and Crop Science—each competing in its own arena. In Crop Science, it faces agrichemical and seed giants like Corteva and BASF, plus specialty chemical players. Its Medicines division contends with innovative pharmaceutical heavyweights: Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Sanofi, and Merck. Consumer Health puts it against branded OTC competitors like Kenvue and Haleon. The company carries meaningful structural risks. Litigation stemming from the Monsanto acquisition casts a long shadow over the portfolio. Across all divisions, regulatory tightening and pricing pressure are constant headwinds. R&D execution and patent cliffs pose pipeline risks. Operationally, input cost volatility, competitive intensity, and the ongoing work of integrating acquisitions all demand attention.
| Company | Ticker |
|---|---|
| Corteva, Inc. | CTVA.NYSE |
| BASF SE | BAS.XETRA |
| FMC Corporation | FMC.NYSE |
| KWS SAAT SE & Co. KGaA | KWS.XETRA |
| Novartis AG | NOVN.SIX |
| Roche Holding AG | ROG.SIX |
| Pfizer Inc. | PFE.NYSE |
| Merck & Co., Inc. | MRK.NYSE |
| Johnson & Johnson | JNJ.NYSE |
| Kenvue Inc. | KVUE.NYSE |
| Haleon plc | HLN.LSE |
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Start Free Trial| Period | Bayer AG NA | vs DAX | vs S&P 500 (SPY) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1M | +42.39% | +40.68% | +40.98% |
| 3M | +26.00% | +20.83% | +15.74% |
| 6M | +31.08% | +31.96% | +22.78% |
| 1Y | +87.51% | +84.08% | +65.64% |
| 3Y | +5.45% | -55.02% | -71.53% |
| 5Y | +9.05% | -50.55% | -74.64% |
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Start Free TrialHow the company’s key valuation ratios (P/E, P/S, P/B and P/CF) have evolved over time compared to today.
| Period | P/E Ratio | P/S Ratio | P/B Ratio | P/CF Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current | -23.2 | 1.1 | 1.7 | 11.0 |
| 1Y ago | -7.5 | 0.6 | 0.8 | 3.6 |
| 3Y ago | 33.1 | 1.0 | 1.3 | 18.1 |
| 5Y ago | -18.7 | 1.2 | 1.6 | 25.7 |
Long-term record of paid dividends (amount per share and dividend yield at the time of payment).
| Year | Dividend | Yield at payment | Avg. yield |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 0.11 EUR | 0.29% | 2.31% |
| 2025 | 0.11 EUR | 0.48% | |
| 2024 | 0.11 EUR | 0.40% | |
| 2023 | 2.40 EUR | 4.02% | |
| 2022 | 2.00 EUR | 3.18% | |
| 2021 | 2.00 EUR | 3.68% | |
| 2020 | 2.80 EUR | 4.44% | |
| 2019 | 2.80 EUR | 4.55% | |
| 2018 | 2.76 EUR | 2.73% | |
| 2017 | 2.66 EUR | 2.38% | |
| 2017 | 0.03 EUR | 0.03% | |
| 2016 | 2.46 EUR | 2.48% | |
| 2015 | 2.21 EUR | 1.64% | |
| 2014 | 2.07 EUR | 2.07% | |
| 2013 | 1.87 EUR | 2.34% |
Historical earnings performance shows how consistently the company meets or exceeds analyst expectations. Forward estimates provide insight into expected profitability and growth trajectory.
Selected income statement, balance sheet and cash flow figures. Annual and quarterly, based on reported IFRS/GAAP financials.
| 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 45.58B | 46.61B | 47.64B | 50.74B | 44.08B |
| Operating income (EBIT) | 6.95B | 4.48B | 8.41B | 8.24B | 7.93B |
| Net income | -3.62B | -2.55B | -2.94B | 4.15B | 1.00B |
| Free cash flow | 2.08B | 4.59B | 2.37B | 4.14B | 2.48B |
| Total assets | 110.61B | 110.85B | 116.26B | 124.88B | 120.24B |
| Equity | 25.95B | 31.91B | 32.93B | 38.77B | 33.02B |
| Net debt | 30.77B | 34.62B | 38.88B | 36.48B | 34.97B |