Munich Re’s Record Payout Can’t Stop the Stock From Hitting the Skids
Veröffentlicht: 30.04.2026 um 15:11 Uhr, Redaktion boerse-global.de
The numbers coming out of Munich Re are the kind most companies only dream of. A record net profit of €6.121bn, a dividend hike of 20%, and a fresh €2.25bn share buyback programme. Yet the market response has been anything but celebratory. The stock slid 3.3% on Thursday to €509.60, brushing against its 52-week low of €507.60.
The immediate culprit is technical. Shares began trading ex-dividend after yesterday’s annual general meeting, meaning new buyers no longer qualify for the €24.00 per share payout. That mechanical adjustment accounts for the bulk of the day’s decline. But the stock has been under pressure for weeks, and the RSI reading of 28 — firmly in oversold territory — suggests the selling has gone beyond the dividend effect.
A €5.3bn Pledge to Shareholders
The payout package is substantial by any measure. The €24 dividend, payable on 5 May 2026 to eligible holders, represents a 20% increase on last year’s distribution. Combined with the buyback programme — which will see Munich Re repurchase up to €2.25bn of its own shares before the next AGM — total capital returned to investors comes to roughly €5.3bn.
That generosity is underpinned by a balance sheet that looks bulletproof. The solvency ratio stands at 298%, well above the company’s optimal target range. It’s the kind of cushion that allows management to reward shareholders without breaking a sweat.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying MĂĽnchener RĂĽck?
Profit Discipline Over Top-Line Growth
The record 2025 performance was driven by a sharp improvement in the underwriting result, which surged to €9.8bn. The group net profit of €6.121bn beat its own guidance of €6.0bn, marking the fifth consecutive year Munich Re has exceeded its forecasts. The reinsurance segment contributed €5.2bn, while primary insurance subsidiary ERGO added around €920m.
Management has now set its sights on a fresh target: group net profit of €6.3bn for 2026. The reinsurance division is expected to deliver the lion’s share at €5.4bn, with ERGO chipping in nearly €1bn. Insurance revenue is projected to climb to roughly €64bn.
The strategy remains one of discipline over volume. In recent renewal rounds, the company has shown a willingness to walk away from business if pricing doesn’t meet internal return thresholds. Profitability, not market share, is the mantra.
MĂĽnchener RĂĽck at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.
A Stock That’s Cheap for a Reason?
For all the fundamental strength, the share price tells a different story. At €509, Munich Re trades near its lowest point in 52 weeks. The question hanging over the stock is whether the 2026 profit target of €6.3bn can convince investors that the current discount is unwarranted.
The next major test comes on 12 May, when the company releases first-quarter results. Those numbers will show whether the operational momentum from 2025 has carried into the new year — and whether the market’s scepticism is misplaced or justified.
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