Welcome everybody to the Q1 update call of the Mutares Group. My name is Mark Friedrich, CFO of the group. Next to me is Johannes, CIO of the group, and we'll run you through the presentation today. As last time, I will start with a management summary and then dig into Q1, 2026. Johannes will take over again, portfolio update and the outlook. Since we just spoke two weeks ago, I just wanna repeat the management summary that we already presented last time. Last year, we reached quite a significant number in terms of holding net income of EUR 130 million. We reached our target here. We were in the range. Also, group revenues were in the range.
Communicated a guidance of EUR 7.9 billion-EUR 9.1 billion in group revenues and holding net income of EUR 165 million-EUR 200 million for 2026. The basis for this is actually the pipeline on sell side and buy side here. Actually, the basis for this, again, forms in the successful capital increase that we completed by the end of April. When looking ahead already, next milestone for us, where we see each other then, is the annual shareholder meeting beginning of July, where the company proposed a EUR 2 dividend per share. When looking at Q1 financials, we again made a step forward in the group, reaching EUR 1.7 billion in revenues.
Second half will be much stronger in terms of revenue and also EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA due to the completion of the already signed transactions. Namely, the ones that we presented last time, Borealis and or Wärtsilä and Jadeed, that will then massively contribute to the financials in the second half of the year. EBITDA already again EUR 160 million due to the bargain purchases of support transactions that we closed in Q1. I will mention the ones once we look at the life cycle. Adjusted EBITDA of EUR 11 million made a big step forward compared to last year. Across a lot of different portfolio companies here. Also here, I would name a few when we look into the segments.
The net income of the holding is pretty much flat here compared to last year, where we had EUR 30 million due to the exit of Steyr last year. This year we had no exit in Q1. We already included here the consulting fee of approximately EUR 6 million as an expense already. You see a negative result. We would've been positive as we communicated all the time that due to the consulting business, we also generate positive earnings. Looking at the portfolio and the different segmentation now for the first time with the five new segments that we have communicated here that we want to steer here also in the future.
You see that four out of the five segments have a positive adjusted EBITDA reached in Q1, and only the one goods and services that includes the majority of the retail part is still negative. When starting at the top automotive and mobility, we still have here reached a positive adjusted EBITDA and due to the big progress here in SFC Group and also Amaneos Group. Last year we had a one-off year. That's why you see a substantial amount. Here again, I think it's a good progress when looking at the different portfolio companies here. Engineering and technology did a turnaround here from -15 to + 21. Here we have included NEM Energy and Efacec especially, both have pretty much made a big step forward compared to last year, contributing massively positive to the segment.
The new segment, infrastructure and defense, also made a big step forward here. Here we have included especially also Magirus that did a big step forward in terms of adjusted EBITDA, and will continue to do so throughout the year. I already mentioned goods and services, which remains in terms of the retail part, the complicated one, we have also here in the segment quite a lot of different good ones. These ones are performing well. Once I'm reaching the life cycle, I will also dig into the different entities. Chemicals and materials is a new segment introduced due to the upcoming acquisition of Jadeed. We have here included Holliday Pigments, once we have reached second half of the year, we will see here also much higher numbers.
As always, we update our life cycle and the cluster into the three phases that we, that we communicate all the time. We have highlighted here in the life cycle the portfolio companies in green that we have upgraded. We have not downgraded any entity. Instead, we have upgraded 12 entities. As you are familiar with our business model, we also target to divest already from optimization phase, but the majority should come from harvesting. When starting here also with the realignment phase, you see the companies at the bottom left, the ones that we closed in Q1, HARO, Holliday Pigments, Ferrari and Mimovrste . These combined entities contributed massively in terms of bargain purchase. On the right side, you see the financials attached to it, and it looks like quite sound, quite okay.
Negative in terms of profitability and realignment, breakeven in optimization and substantially positive in harvesting. When looking at the harvesting phase, we see here a lot of entities, and that's pretty much the transparency about what we had in the management summary where we said that we have a big pipeline in terms of exit potential. I mean, looking at the lifecycle, pretty much this is what we actually also intend to deliver here throughout 2026 and 2027. With this, I will already hand over to Johannes for portfolio update.
Thank you, Mark. I don't want to repeat what was said two weeks ago. I will take you quickly on the portfolio and also on the outlook. I would like to do that to give you a little bit of insight on the operations side and on, specifically on one company called Donges, and how we work, what is our day-to-day in and out challenges we have. On the outlook, I will give you a little bit of insight on the M&A work. How do we make the SABIC transaction happen in the U.S., which is now planned to close by the end of June?
If you look at our portfolio, the five segments, we are leveling into the five segments, which also gives us a good portion to be risk-balanced. We are focusing at the moment on the buy side on the energy segment, on the infrastructure segment, on the defense segment, on the chemical segment, and on industrial services segment, where we see great opportunities to grow further, also in Europe, but also especially in America and Asia. One of the companies on the infrastructure side we having here in our portfolio is Donges. We would like to go a little bit into detail of Donges. I explain you a little bit how we work, what is the day-to-day challenge. The transaction was done in 2017.
We bought a steel manufacturer, steel business from Mitsubishi Hitachi at that point in time. They were very busy in the energy segment, on the coal side of the business, very much into buildings and very little into bridges. We took over this business in 2017, November. Actually, this was my last job as a CEO before I became board member in 2019. I went in with a group of people. I went in with guys like Mathieu, like Christian Klingler, like Kris Schleede, who's today leading the supervisory board. We made a restructuring plan. We made, on a piece of paper, on a blank piece of paper, we draw the future of the business, what we want to achieve, where we wanna go.
We wanna cut off the energy part on the coal segment, and we wanna go into bridges. This was the overall strategy, what we did. Step by step, we had to conduct some social plans. We had to shift capabilities. We had to shift capacities into this new operation. Step by step, we grew the company from, at that point in time, EUR 35 million in sales, to today, more than EUR 110 million in sales. We grew the company from negative profitability to a almost 10% profitability as of today. Donges is situated in Darmstadt, in very close to Frankfurt, and is the leading steel bridge maker in Germany today. Quite some impressive buildings, and quite some impressive bridges as well, constructed over the past years. With that, I would like to give you a little insight on Donges, more what they do, and we have a little clip for you.
We are here in the Donges pre-manufacturing hall for big bridge parts and big building parts. Donges started in 1872. Over the years, Donges developed to a company which is now able to build the biggest bridges, to build the highest buildings. This is what we do now.
My name is Stephan Langer, and I'm the Head of Business Unit Bridge Construction. Bridge Construction means responsibility, technically, in terms of scheduling, and as society as a whole. We deliver complex steel and composite bridges, often under highly challenging conditions. Every project is unique, with demanding requirements for structural design, logistics, and erection. Our strength lies in the close integration of engineering, fabrication, and erection, and in the experience of our teams, who reliably deliver even the most demanding projects.
In building constructions, we create structural frameworks for industry, infrastructure, and economic growth. As Head of Business Unit Building Constructions, I'm responsible for sales and order processing, from planning through manufacturing and assembly, to hand over to the client. Whether industrial facilities, special structures, or complex steel constructions, we develop efficient, functional solutions tailored to use, requirements, and the entire life cycle of a building. It's not just about steel, it's about integrated thinking from design and fabrication to on-time installation.
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Mutares acquired Donges 2017. The combination of tradition and long-term experience and a strong shareholder gives us the assurance for the future. We are proud of our products. We are proud of what we are doing because we help to maintain the infrastructure and to build long-lasting products for the future.
This was an insight on Donges, a company we developed very well over the past years, under the leadership of Dr. Wolf Cornelius, who you saw in the beginning and the end of the movie. Which brings me over to the outlook because Wolf is our young, creative spirit and secret weapon we have. Wolf was a very, very big contributor also to the outlook on the M&A transaction of Jadeed, of the SABIC ETP business. Would you like to give an insight a bit on how we made a deal, how, you know, how we come to the deal, and also give you an update where we stand and where the business are? How do we work on M&A side?
We got into contact on this transaction, through our network, then we were approached by investment banks. The investment banks came to us and say, do you wanna have a look? We immediately formed a global team because we have the U.S. part, but we also have a European part. We formed a team in the U.S. and in Europe in order to collaborate on the transaction. Operationally, we added a operations team led by Wolf Cornelius, to evaluate the operational situation, the market, the technical skills, the equipment we would acquire.
Overall, this led to the fact that after very intense negotiation over Christmas, over New Year, for us and for the team, there was no Christmas and no New Year party because we signed a deal on January 6th in London, together with the seller side. This was an intense transaction where everything have to fall into each other and click together. The M&A team is obviously the sourcing bit and the heavy lifting there. It needs to click in with the operational knowledge and the know-how we brought into the picture. It needs to click in with all our stakeholders on the guarantee side, with our stakeholders on the financing side, with our stakeholders on the legal side, on the tech side. On all other diligent sides, it needs to click in.
Putting a deal and assembling a deal together in the size of Jadeed is a absolute great teamwork and everybody needs to be willing to fight for his or her colleague in order to make it happen and in order to make it successful. We have transacted on January 6th. The deal is planned to close by the end of Q2. In the meanwhile, we are following up on the business. On the business side, the company is developing as planned from an operational perspective. Obviously, we have now a little bit of support from the market due to the Iran conflict, where oil prices go up and very much the sales price of our product selling to the oil price, which means higher oil price, higher sales price.
The impact on the feedstock is not neglectable, but it's also not compensating this profitability. At the moment, we are quite happy. Business is going in the right direction, market is going in the right direction, and operationally they have done what we have expected since we signed the deal on January 6th. There is still some restructuring necessary after we close the transaction, so in the summertime there will be the heavy operational lifting then. Handover will happen to the operations team, and we will move forward with this transaction. Have it, as Mark mentioned before, in the second half of the year, full ownership of the ETP business from SABIC, mainly in North America. This should give you a little bit an insight how a deal on the M&A side is structured.
Very proud of this and can't wait to have it then live in Q3 with us. Thanks a lot for listening in. Shortly after the earnings call of 2025, we hope to give you a little bit of update on Q1. We see each other again on the 18th of August. We will publish our half year's result on the 13th of August and then have our call the 18th of August. The difference in dates is just pure to the fact that I'm on holiday on the 13th, so we will hold the call on the 18th. Thank you very much for hanging in. Have a good time and happy summer. Bye-bye.