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Mercedes‑Benz Group (MBG.XETRA) — 2020–2026 timeline
| Date / Period | Major company- and stock-specific events | Investor perception and narrative | Key technical phases on the chart | |---|---|---|---| | Mar–Jun 2020 | Production suspensions across Europe announced March 17, 2020, with aggressive cash preservation and cost measures as COVID‑19 took hold; Q1 retail volumes contracted materially (Q1 sales down ~14.9%). [57][66][68] Gradual plant restart and ramp‑up began in June 2020. [65] | Stock entered a "survival" phase, treated as highly cyclical; investors focused on liquidity, cash flow and operational resilience rather than growth. [66] | Sharp COVID sell‑off in March with a volatile V‑shaped bounce into H2 2020; rapid intrayear recovery as plants restarted. | | Jul–Oct 2020 | Strategic refocus announced via Capital Markets Day—"Electric First" and Ambition 2039 accelerating BEV investment and premium positioning. [47][20] Manufacturing footprint and model mix adjustments followed as part of margin focus (including US sedan production changes). [63] | A transition narrative emerged: incumbent premium OEM repositioning as a luxury and EV leader (growth plus margin focus) rather than a broad commodity manufacturer. [47][20] | Recovery continued from 2020 lows; momentum improved as strategy and EV roadmap were priced in. | | Feb–Dec 2021 | Daimler announced plans to separate Daimler Truck (February 3, 2021); Board approval followed (July 30, 2021); shareholders approved at EGM (October 1, 2021); legal spin‑off and Daimler Truck listing occurred December 9–10, 2021 (Mercedes‑Benz retained a minority ~35% stake; 5% transferred to pension trust as part of transaction structure). [13][2][3][1][11] Mercedes‑EQS premiered April 15, 2021 and entered production and market launch later that year. [42][50][52] Semiconductor shortages forced production adjustments throughout 2021 (reduced hours and paused lines). [62][58] | Market optimism rose around "value unlock" and EV momentum—investors priced a purer Mercedes‑Benz (luxury and BEV focused) post–truck split while remaining cautious about execution risks (chips, delivery timelines). [1][42][62] | Strong re‑rating into late 2021 with elevated volatility around execution news; reported multi‑year share high around the split and listing period (~€74.25). [10] | | Dec 2021 – Apr 2022 | Legal completion of truck spin‑off and transition to new corporate identity; Daimler AG renamed Mercedes‑Benz Group AG effective February 1, 2022. [6][1] First AGM under new structure (April 29, 2022) featured a large dividend proposal emphasizing capital return and shareholder distributions. [19] | Post‑split reality set in: optimism gave way to focus on margin durability, raw‑material headwinds and supply‑chain drag; investors shifted attention to cash returns and execution rather than multiple expansion. [19][60] | Momentum rolled over from late‑2021 highs; stock entered marked downtrend into 2022 as macro and supply‑chain news depressed expectations. | | 2022 (H1–H2) | Prolonged semiconductor shortages and raw‑material cost pressure forced continued production adjustments and impacted deliveries; management signalled supply relief would only improve later in H2 2022. Reported volumes and sales weakened (Q2 2022 showed year‑on‑year sales decline). [62][58][60][67] | Narrative shifted from "pure growth and EV leader" to "cyclical premium OEM undergoing costly EV transition"—investor focus concentrated on margin conversion, order backlogs, China exposure and dividend sustainability. [62][67][19] | Prolonged correction through 2022 with several failed recovery attempts; volatility increased around earnings and supply‑chain headlines. | | 2023 | Management defended guidance and margins in quarterly calls; leadership continuity reinforced with CEO Ola Källenius contract extended and CFO Harald Wilhelm remaining central to financial execution. [27][18][28][31] Ongoing BEV product and factory ramp activities continued. [42][45] | Market perception became pragmatic and hybrid: some investors treated Mercedes as a long‑term EV platform play; others reclassified it as a near‑term value and dividend candidate while monitoring execution against EV targets. [27][18][47] | Stabilization and sideways trading through 2023 with episodic rallies on execution beats—no sustained return to 2021 peak levels. | | 2024 – 30 Jun 2026 | Continued rollout of EQ family (EQS, EQE and derivatives), factory conversions toward BEV production and ongoing investment in EVA platforms; CEO engagement on China at state and industry level (2024) underlined China's importance. [42][45][55][18] Company emphasized balancing heavy BEV investment with margin recovery and shareholder returns. [47][19] | By mid‑2026 the dominant narrative is mixed: Mercedes is a large, cash‑generative luxury OEM investing heavily to become an EV leader—attractive to income and quality investors but still viewed as cyclically exposed and execution‑sensitive by others. [19][47][27] | Multi‑year retracement from the 2021 highs into 2023–2025 with extended consolidation thereafter; current price (MBG.XETRA) €43.92 (June 30, 2026)—a material reset versus the 2021 peak. |
Mercedes-Benz Group operates in the global premium passenger-vehicle market alongside established European competitors—BMW and Volkswagen/Audi chief among them—while contending with Tesla's EV dominance and the premium EV ambitions of larger multi-brand conglomerates like Stellantis. The company faces material risks around executing its EV transition profitably at scale, managing battery and semiconductor sourcing without margin erosion, and navigating exposure to China alongside stringent regulatory emissions standards. Comparable public companies for reference: BMW (BMW.XETRA, ISIN DE0005190003), Volkswagen (VOW3.XETRA, ISIN DE0007664039), Tesla (TSLA.NASDAQ, ISIN US88160R1014), and Stellantis (STLA.NYSE, ISIN NL00150001Q9). [BMW Group Investor Relations; Deutsche Börse; Tesla; Stellantis Investor Pages]
Mercedes‑Benz Group operates across premium and mass-market segments, facing competition from established automakers (BMW, Volkswagen/Audi, Toyota, Stellantis, Hyundai/Genesis) and an emerging wave of EV-native competitors, particularly Tesla. The battleground spans technology, electrification capability, and software sophistication. The company's risk surface is defined by several interconnected pressures: executing a capital-intensive transition to EVs and software-driven platforms, securing reliable and economical battery and raw-material supply chains, navigating cyclical demand sensitivity (with meaningful captive-finance exposure), and absorbing rising costs from regulatory compliance and geopolitical friction.
| Company | Ticker |
|---|---|
| Bayerische Motoren Werke AG | BMW.XETRA |
| Volkswagen AG | VOW3.XETRA |
| Tesla, Inc. | TSLA.NASDAQ |
| Toyota Motor Corporation (ADR) | TM.NYSE |
| Stellantis N.V. | STLA.NYSE |
| General Motors Company | GM.NYSE |
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Start Free Trial| Period | Mercedes-Benz Group AG | vs DAX | vs S&P 500 (SPY) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1M | -4.93% | -6.64% | -6.34% |
| 3M | -7.61% | -12.78% | -17.87% |
| 6M | -18.51% | -17.63% | -26.81% |
| 1Y | -3.33% | -6.76% | -25.20% |
| 3Y | -19.89% | -80.36% | -96.87% |
| 5Y | +10.17% | -49.43% | -73.52% |
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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 | 9.0 | 0.3 | 0.5 | 2.8 |
| 1Y ago | 5.4 | 0.3 | 0.5 | 2.5 |
| 3Y ago | 5.0 | 0.5 | 0.9 | 4.7 |
| 5Y ago | 5.1 | 0.5 | 0.9 | 2.5 |
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 | 3.50 EUR | 6.56% | 5.07% |
| 2025 | 4.30 EUR | 7.96% | |
| 2024 | 5.27 EUR | 7.26% | |
| 2023 | 5.20 EUR | 7.40% | |
| 2022 | 5.00 EUR | 7.45% | |
| 2021 | 1.13 EUR | 1.78% | |
| 2020 | 0.75 EUR | 2.42% | |
| 2020 | 0.90 EUR | 2.86% | |
| 2019 | 2.72 EUR | 6.39% | |
| 2018 | 3.06 EUR | 5.24% | |
| 2017 | 2.72 EUR | 4.49% | |
| 2016 | 2.72 EUR | 5.20% | |
| 2015 | 2.05 EUR | 2.72% | |
| 2014 | 1.88 EUR | 3.19% | |
| 2013 | 1.84 EUR | 5.16% |
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 | 132.21B | 145.59B | 152.39B | 150.02B | 133.89B |
| Operating income (EBIT) | 4.87B | 12.30B | 17.52B | 17.85B | 14.19B |
| Net income | 5.14B | 10.21B | 14.26B | 14.50B | 23.01B |
| Free cash flow | 8.26B | 9.07B | 6.26B | 9.99B | 17.23B |
| Total assets | 255.47B | 265.01B | 263.02B | 260.01B | 259.83B |
| Equity | 93.26B | 92.63B | 91.77B | 85.42B | 71.95B |
| Net debt | 68.02B | 76.30B | 69.08B | 64.09B | 86.57B |