Aumann AG – Preliminary 2025 Results and 2026 Outlook
Aumann AG (ISIN DE000A2DAM03) released its preliminary financial results for the 2025 fiscal year on 20 March 2026. The company reported a revenue decline of 34.7 % to €204.0 million, compared with €312.3 million in 2024. EBITDA fell 21.2 % to €28.2 million, from €35.8 million the previous year, resulting in a modest improvement in operating profitability.
2025 Performance Highlights
| Metric | 2024 | 2025 (preliminary) | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | €312.3 M | €204.0 M | –34.7 % |
| EBITDA | €35.8 M | €28.2 M | –21.2 % |
| EBITDA margin | 11.4 % | 13.8 % | +2.4 pp |
The company attributes the revenue contraction mainly to market demand shifts in the electric‑mobility sector, while the relatively smaller decline in EBITDA reflects effective cost control and a resilient product mix.
Dividend Proposal
Aumann AG has proposed a dividend of €0.25 per share, to be paid to shareholders of record on 20 March 2026. The dividend represents a dividend payout ratio of approximately 9 % of the preliminary 2025 earnings, in line with the company’s historical distribution policy.
2026 Forecast
The management expects the 2026 revenue to fall further to around €160 million, a decline of roughly 20 % from the preliminary 2025 figure. Nevertheless, Aumann anticipates an EBITDA margin of 6 % to 8 % for 2026, supported by anticipated operational efficiencies and a focus on high‑margin product lines.
Market Context
- Current share price (18 March 2026): €13.16
- 52‑week high: €15.48 (9 February 2026)
- 52‑week low: €10.68 (27 August 2025)
- Market capitalisation: €172.3 million
- Price‑to‑earnings ratio: 11.02
Aumann operates within the industrial machinery sector, designing and manufacturing equipment for electric‑motor production and other e‑mobility markets. Its global customer base spans automotive, aerospace, and railway industries. The company’s continued investment in automation and production line solutions positions it to adapt to evolving customer demands despite short‑term revenue volatility.




