Citigroup upgraded its view on Continental AG on Friday, raising the broker's price target to €80 from €78 and placing the German tyre maker on its European Focus List. The move accompanies a maintained "buy" recommendation and follows commentary that the company faces a "catalyst-rich" period as it moves closer to a potential disposal of its ContiTech industrial division while reporting strong early-year margins.
Using the June 11 closing price of €69.76 as a reference, Citi's €80 target implies a total expected return of 18.9% for investors, which the broker breaks down into an anticipated 14.7% share-price appreciation and a 4.2% dividend yield. At the time cited, Continental's market capitalisation was roughly €13.71 billion.
Citi arrived at the €80 objective by blending a sum-of-the-parts, or SOTP, valuation of €78 with a discounted cash flow valuation of €83. Within the SOTP, Citi attributes a value of about €3.60 billion to ContiTech, applying a 9x EV/EBIT multiple consistent with comparable European industrial peers. The core tyres division is measured at an 8.5x EV/EBIT multiple, a valuation that reflects assumptions of an EBIT margin in excess of 13.5% for 2026.
On the margin outlook, Citi's tyre-margin forecast for 2026 is 14.1%, which sits inside Continental's own guidance range of 13.0% to 14.5%. The broker has modelled organic growth of 3.0% for the second quarter and 2.3% for the full year 2026. Adjusted EBIT margins are projected at 13.9% for Q2 and 14.1% for the full year, and Citi notes its second-quarter tyres adjusted EBIT estimate is roughly 2% ahead of consensus. The firm cites company management, including a CEO remark that the second quarter should be "pretty comparable to what you have seen in Q1."
Regarding a potential ContiTech sale, Citi outlined the shareholder-return implications under a scenario where the division fetches €3.50 billion. Even at that price, management could distribute in excess of €1.40 billion via special dividends - approximately €7 per share - which Citi says would amount to around 10% of Continental's then-current market capitalisation. The analysts also expect the company to allocate roughly €2 billion of sale proceeds toward deleveraging in 2027, with any remaining proceeds available for return to shareholders.
Balance-sheet metrics cited by Citi show net debt of €5.10 billion against tyres EBITDA for full-year 2025 of €2.70 billion, equating to a trailing net debt/EBITDA ratio of 1.9x. Continental's medium-term target for leverage is below 1x net debt/EBITDA within the 2027-2029 window.
On operational and financial forecasts, Citi projects 2026 sales of €18.24 billion and net income of €1.35 billion, with core earnings per share estimated at €6.77 for 2026 and rising to €7.77 in 2027 and €8.30 in 2028. Dividend guidance in the Citi model points to €2.90 per share in 2026, increasing to €3.80 by 2028, which the broker notes implies a yield of 5.5% on the current share price.
Investors and market participants are being directed to two near-term company events identified by Citi as potential catalysts: a second-quarter pre-close call scheduled for July 1 and the publication of full interim results on August 4.
Context for markets: The broker's revised valuation and inclusion of Continental on its Focus List directly affect equity investors tracking automotive suppliers and industrial asset valuations. A possible ContiTech disposal could influence M&A activity and capital allocation within the industrials and automotive supplier sectors, while leverage metrics and dividend expectations are relevant to fixed-income and equity income investors.