Strong Rent Growth Can't Stem Vonovia's Cash Flow Squeeze Ahead of AGM
18.05.2026 - 12:53:25 | boerse-global.de
Germany's largest residential landlord heads into its annual general meeting on May 21 with a mixed bag of operational gains and deepening financial strains. While rents and service income are climbing, Vonovia’s free cash flow has plunged by 43%, leaving it in a tighter spot as refinancing deadlines loom. The disconnect between solid underlying operations and a shrinking cash cushion is likely to dominate shareholder questions in Bochum.
The first-quarter numbers lay bare the contradiction. The operating free cash flow dropped from €633.6 million to €363.9 million, driven by higher capital spending and a slower pace of asset sales. Cash holdings shrank accordingly, falling from €2.18 billion to €1.8 billion. That squeeze comes at an awkward time: Vonovia must refinance around €1.6 billion this year, with roughly €5 billion falling due in each of the following two years. The stock has felt the pressure, sliding to €21.40 — more than 29% below its 52-week high of €30.16 and down over 11% year-to-date. On Friday the shares closed at €21.77, perilously close to the 52-week low of €20.97.
Tensions have been brewing beyond the balance sheet. TR Property Investment Trust, a British fund holding a scant 0.16% stake, has publicly accused management of a lack of transparency. Fund manager Marcus Phayre-Mudge complained that several major institutions were prevented from asking questions during the analyst call earlier this month. The dispute adds a layer of friction to an already defensive investor mood.
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The operational story, however, remains robust. Average rents rose 3.8% to €8.46 per square meter, and the occupancy rate hit 97.7%. Organic rent growth ran at 4.0%, despite a net reduction of around 4,000 units in the portfolio. The value-add services segment posted a standout performance, with adjusted EBITDA jumping more than 30% to €50.1 million. Group adjusted EBITDA climbed 6.3% overall. The adjusted operating result edged up to roughly €712 million. Yet higher financing costs — which CFO Philip Grosse attributed in part to volatility from the Middle East conflict — dragged adjusted profit down 7.2% to nearly €366 million, or €0.43 per share.
The AGM agenda reflects both the company's stability and its need to manage shareholder expectations. The board is proposing a dividend of €1.25 per share, paid from the tax equity account. For domestic investors that means a payout free of capital gains tax. Some critical shareholders are pushing for a full waiver. Separately, supervisory board members would receive a fixed annual compensation of €132,000, with 20% compulsorily held in Vonovia shares. Among personnel changes, Dr. Anne-Marie Großmann-Minkwitz is set to replace outgoing board member Matthias Hünlein, while Jürgen Fenk stands for re-election.
Vonovia is sticking to its full-year targets: adjusted EBITDA Total of €2.95 billion to €3.05 billion, and adjusted EBT of €1.9 billion to €2.0 billion. The medium-term goal is to cut the leverage ratio below 12 times by 2028 and bring loan-to-value to around 40%. A key test for the property valuation comes on June 30, when Vonovia will complete a full revaluation of its €84.8 billion portfolio — a figure that, if it confirms management’s expectation of stabilisation, could provide some ballast for the stock. The next major reporting milestone is the half-year results due on August 5.
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