
The recently published full-year financial report for 2025 provides a stark illustration of the pressures faced by Mercedes-Benz over the last twelve months. A combination of challenges, most notably in the critical Chinese market, weighed heavily on profitability and cash generation. In response, the automaker has unveiled a dual strategy of aggressive cost management and an unprecedented product rollout. The central question for investors is whether this approach can reignite earnings growth as early as 2026.
Financial Performance Under Strain
The 2025 fiscal year proved to be a difficult one for the German automotive giant. The company’s adjusted EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes) contracted significantly, falling to €8.20 billion from €13.70 billion the previous year—a decline of approximately 40%. Management cited several key factors: tariff impacts of around $1.2 billion, intensified competitive dynamics in China, and adverse currency exchange effects. These headwinds contributed to a 9% drop in overall vehicle sales.
The decline was even more pronounced at the bottom line. Group net profit after tax plummeted by 48% to €5.33 billion. While cost-saving measures, totaling about €3.6 billion, absorbed some of the external pressures, they were insufficient to fully offset the downturn.
Capital Allocation: Dividends and Buybacks
Ahead of the Annual General Meeting scheduled for April 16, the Board of Management and the Supervisory Board will propose a dividend of €3.50 per share, down from €4.30 paid out for the prior year. Concurrently, the company’s share repurchase initiative continues. During November and December of 2025, Mercedes-Benz bought back its own shares for roughly €329 million. A further volume of up to €1.7 billion is authorized for 2026.
In a related move, the company has reached agreements with its major shareholders, Beijing Automotive Group and Geely Group. Both have committed to maintaining their voting rights below the 10% threshold by proportionally selling shares into the ongoing buyback program.
Strategic Countermeasures: Localization and Product Blitz
China remains Mercedes-Benz’s most significant single market, accounting for nearly one-third of its passenger car sales in 2025. This makes a 19% sales decline in the region particularly impactful, especially amid mounting competition from domestic electric vehicle manufacturers.
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The cornerstone of the company’s response is an accelerated localization strategy. By mid-2026, the goal is to source more than 80% of vehicles sold in China from local production, aiming to benefit from a more favorable cost structure.
Complementing this is what the company describes as the most extensive product offensive in its history. Plans call for the launch of more than 40 new models over the next three years. The first half of 2026 will see major upgrades for the S-Class and GLS lines, followed by new AMG models. This product surge coincides with capacity adjustments, including the planned closure of the joint venture plant in Aguascalientes, Mexico by May, reducing capacity by approximately 100,000 units. The automaker is targeting a 10% reduction in production costs per vehicle by 2027.
Cash flow remains a focal point. The industrial business generated a free cash flow of €5.4 billion in 2025. For the current year, management anticipates a slight further decrease but expects revenue to stabilize at prior-year levels alongside a significantly higher Group EBIT. The target adjusted return on sales for the Cars division is set between 3% and 5%.
Market Sentiment and the Road Ahead
Current share price action reflects investor caution. The stock closed today’s session at €56.86, a gain of 1.01%, but has declined 3.53% over the past week and trades below its 50-day moving average of €58.81. A Relative Strength Index (RSI) reading of 36.3 further indicates a notable cooling of momentum.
The upcoming weeks are crucial. The Annual General Meeting on April 16 will formalize the dividend, followed by the release of Q1 2026 results on April 29. This first-quarter report will offer the initial concrete evidence on whether the triad of Chinese localization, capacity rationalization, and cost initiatives is successfully setting the stage for the projected earnings recovery in 2026.
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