KONE stock climbed 1.6% to trade at €50.16 after Kepler Cheuvreux moved the Finnish lift and escalator specialist from Hold to Buy and published a EUR 68 price target. The broker’s upgrade was directly linked to KONE’s proposed cash-and-share combination with TK Elevator, a transaction valued at EUR 29.4 billion.
Kepler Cheuvreux’s analysts based the upgrade in part on their expectations for likely antitrust remedies. They anticipate those remedies would be focused mainly on Germany-led European field operations. Even after such remedies, the brokerage estimated KONE would retain about 85% of TKE’s revenue and roughly 80% of TKE’s adjusted EBITDA, a recovery level that the analysts said makes the merger’s financial proposition persuasive.
The rating change followed a sequence of deal-related developments that have reduced procedural uncertainty. KONE’s Extraordinary General Meeting on June 3, 2026 approved the main resolutions needed to push the transaction forward, including authorization to issue new class B shares and the election of two additional board members. Those shareholder actions removed a notable administrative barrier to closing the combination.
Projected scale and cost synergies also factored into the market reaction. KONE and TKE together are forecast to produce around EUR 20.5 billion in annual sales and capture an estimated EUR 700 million in annual run-rate synergies. That combined footprint is expected to put the enlarged group ahead of its peers Otis and Schindler in global market share.
Market context did not materially drive the move. The wider Finnish equity market set a steady backdrop, with the OMX Helsinki index trading modestly higher. There were no major European Central Bank policy announcements or fresh Finnish macroeconomic releases that appeared to influence investor sentiment significantly on the day, so the stock’s outperformance was attributable predominantly to company-specific news.
Kepler Cheuvreux framed its re-rating on a post-merger financial analysis that, according to the broker, strengthened investor confidence in KONE’s longer-term earnings profile. The shares traded within an intraday range of €49.12 to €50.24 and were pushed toward the upper end of that span, while remaining materially below the new EUR 68 analyst target.
Note on data: Intraday prices and analyst actions reported relate to the events described; no additional macro or policy drivers were identified in the reporting.