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HOCHTIEF: From Event Risk to Infrastructure Scale
Nov 2021 – Nov 2022
HOCHTIEF initiated a substantial share-buyback program in November 2021 (up to 4.6m shares, approximately €318m) and ran it through the following year, though execution proved minimal—only 71,560 shares repurchased at an average price near €69.20 [56,59,60]. A Chile project arbitration decision weighed on near-term results and featured prominently in management communications [5]. Investors initially read the buyback as confidence against event risk, but the limited repurchases signalled intent without meaningful executional impact. The narrative settled into "value with event risk" as the year progressed [56,60,5].
23 February 2022
HOCHTIEF approved an unconditional off-market takeover offer for remaining CIMIC shares at AU$22 per share, with maximum consideration around AU$1.46bn (approximately €940m) and committed financing facilities [16,15,17]. The market split between those seeing upside from full Australian control and those concerned about cash outflow, leverage and near-term dilution [16,15].
May–June 2022
The CIMIC squeeze-out completed on 10 June 2022, giving HOCHTIEF 100% ownership. Total consideration reached approximately €940m, financed partly through a 10% capital increase (€406m) with ACS as a major subscriber at a placement price of €57.50, and otherwise through debt and available cash [11,17,24,10,18]. S&P noted the elimination of remaining 21.5% minority interests [3]. Investor reaction was mixed: the strategic logic of full control was accepted, but immediate concerns about dilution and balance-sheet flexibility dominated. The narrative became "transformational but costly" with rising ACS influence evident [16,15].
20 July 2022
Juan Santamaría Cases was appointed CEO, succeeding Marcelino Fernández Verdes. Cases carried close ties to ACS leadership [41,43], and the market interpreted this as clearer strategic alignment under the majority owner. Governance consolidation under ACS became the dominant narrative [41,43].
H2 2022 – 2023
Post-takeover integration of CIMIC proceeded as HOCHTIEF reported improving performance through 2023. Operational net profit rose to approximately €553m, and management proposed dividend increases to €4.40 while confirming guidance into 2024 [11,4]. Investor perception shifted from takeover risk to execution and earnings recovery. The street narrative became "integration-led recovery" with improving cash generation, and sentiment turned constructive [11,4].
17 April 2023
Ángel Muriel Bernal was appointed Chief Operating Officer, reinforcing an operational execution narrative. Investors saw a focus on delivery after heavy M&A activity [55].
Q1 – Mid-2024
ACS continued consolidating HOCHTIEF equity, with control reported at approximately 79.1% in Q1 2024, further reducing free-float [8]. HOCHTIEF increasingly appeared as part of the ACS strategic group rather than a standalone, broadly held stock. Minority-holder and liquidity considerations became more prominent [8].
July 2024 – H2 2024
HOCHTIEF announced integration of Flatiron and Dragados North America to create a combined US civil business (ACS 61.8% / HOCHTIEF 38.2%), with closing expected in H2 2024—a material scale play in the US market [6,33]. The announcement reinforced a "scale plus strategic growth" narrative and produced a bullish re-rating as markets priced long-term earnings leverage from scale [6,33].
2024 Full Year (Reported February 2025)
Strong financials emerged: nominal net profit of €776m (+48% year-on-year), operational net profit €625m (+13%) above guidance, and a record order backlog of €67.6bn (+22%) [7,6]. Management proposed a dividend of €5.23 and completed the Flatiron-Dragados integration while acquiring Dornan [7,6]. Major project wins included a large hyperscale data-centre award, Cobbora solar development rights, and significant PPP and transport projects [7,6]. The market repositioned HOCHTIEF as a large-scale infrastructure and data-centre beneficiary with strong backlog and cash flow. The narrative evolved to "defensive compounder with growth in infrastructure and hyperscale data centres," and buy-side sentiment turned more positive on valuation and dividend trajectory [7,6].
2025 (Through Mid-Year)
Execution of the US integration accelerated alongside large contract awards across 2025, including CoreWeave data-centre work and major rail, tunnel and regional projects [7,5]. Management raised 2025 guidance to operational net profit of approximately €680–730m [7,5]. The narrative consolidated around Hochtief as a large-backlog operator with recurring PPP and infrastructure revenues plus growing hyperscale data-centre and renewables exposure [7,5].
February 2026
Multiple material contract and project notices appeared in early 2026: HOCHTIEF participation in a >US$10bn Meta data-centre campus, a €230m federal contract, and a Malaysian data-centre win [5]. Corporate notices also referenced arbitration decisions in the period [5]. Market perception confirmed HOCHTIEF as a major executor on hyperscale and public infrastructure mandates, with the "scale plus backlog" narrative supporting a premium multiple despite limited free-float [5].
7 July 2026
Current price stands at 472, reflecting the cumulative re-rating driven by M&A consolidation, large-ticket project wins, record backlog, strong cash flow generation and ownership concentration under ACS.
HOCHTIEF is a leading German construction and infrastructure group competing across transport, energy, building and PPP/concession projects against large European and international contractors. The competitive landscape is dominated by integrated contractors and engineering firms bidding on the same complex infrastructure work. The business carries inherent pressures: project execution risk, margin compression, volatile input costs and cyclical public tendering. Layered on top are concession and financing exposures, plus the material governance and financial influence of majority shareholder ACS.
Hochtief operates in large-scale construction, civil engineering and infrastructure concessions across global markets, competing directly with major listed groups like VINCI, ACS and Ferrovial alongside regional and specialist contractors. The business turns on three drivers: executing large projects, securing public-sector concessions, and converting backlog into revenue. Risk concentrates in project execution and cost overruns, the working-capital demands of the business, liquidity pressure, competitive margin erosion, and exposure to shifts in public spending and regulatory frameworks around concessions.
| Company | Ticker |
|---|---|
| VINCI SA | DG.PA |
| ACS, Actividades de Construccion y Servicios SA | ACS.MC |
| Ferrovial, S.A. | FER.MC |
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Start Free Trial| Period | HOCHTIEF Aktiengesellschaft | vs DAX | vs S&P 500 (SPY) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1M | -4.49% | -6.20% | -5.90% |
| 3M | +6.26% | +1.09% | -4.00% |
| 6M | +35.25% | +36.13% | +26.95% |
| 1Y | +176.90% | +173.47% | +155.03% |
| 3Y | +563.83% | +503.36% | +486.85% |
| 5Y | +771.71% | +712.11% | +688.02% |
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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 | 44.1 | 0.9 | 23.1 | 15.3 |
| 1Y ago | 15.4 | 0.3 | 17.5 | 6.4 |
| 3Y ago | 11.6 | 0.2 | 5.2 | 6.0 |
| 5Y ago | 10.3 | 0.2 | 5.7 | 5.7 |
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 | 6.60 EUR | 1.47% | 3.3% |
| 2025 | 5.23 EUR | 3.08% | |
| 2024 | 4.40 EUR | 4.36% | |
| 2023 | 4.00 EUR | 4.96% | |
| 2022 | 1.91 EUR | 3.20% | |
| 2021 | 3.93 EUR | 4.97% | |
| 2020 | 5.80 EUR | 7.91% | |
| 2019 | 4.98 EUR | 4.07% | |
| 2018 | 3.38 EUR | 2.21% | |
| 2017 | 2.60 EUR | 1.52% | |
| 2016 | 2.00 EUR | 1.76% | |
| 2015 | 1.90 EUR | 2.81% | |
| 2014 | 1.50 EUR | 2.22% | |
| 2013 | 1.00 EUR | 1.77% | |
| 2011 | 2.00 EUR | 3.23% |
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 | 38.24B | 33.30B | 27.76B | 26.22B | 21.38B |
| Operating income (EBIT) | 993.84M | 569.87M | 890.67M | 816.22M | 582.20M |
| Net income | 902.33M | 775.63M | 522.75M | 481.77M | 293.40M |
| Free cash flow | 1.61B | 1.66B | 1.12B | 863.28M | 307.96M |
| Total assets | 24.94B | 24.65B | 19.01B | 18.30B | 16.24B |
| Equity | 1.27B | 1.07B | 1.24B | 1.13B | 801.00M |
| Net debt | 1.97B | 2.76B | 350.88M | 1.31B | 820.73M |