Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Vonovia SE Full Year Results 2025 Analyst and Investor Conference Call. I am Sandra, the ChorusC all operator. I would like to remind you that all participants will be in listen only mode, and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a Q&A session. You can register for questions at any time by pressing star and one on your telephone. For operator assistance, please press star and zero. The conference must not be recorded for publication or broadcast. At this time, it is my pleasure to hand over to Rene. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Sandra, and welcome everybody to our call. The speakers today are Luka Mucic, our new CEO, and Philip Grosse, our CFO. They will briefly present the highlights and the main messages for today before we open up for Q&A, where both will be very happy to take your questions. By way of a heads up, we will continue with our policy of two questions per analyst, please. With that, over to you, Luka.
Thanks a lot, Rene, and hello and welcome everybody. This is obviously my first earnings call as Vonovia CEO, and hence I'm very pleased to connect with you today, not only regarding our full year numbers, but also on how we look at the development of our business in the near and medium-term future. If I may, I will get us started with a high level view of the key messages and then hand over to Philip for a short recap of 2025. Quick spoiler alert here. The results were very much in line with expectations, in some cases even slightly above. This is actually one of my key initial observations.
It's probably not really surprising, but seeing it from the inside, I'm thoroughly impressed with the remarkable robustness and upward trajectory of the operating business and with the platform Vonovia has built to run that business. Combined with the various non-rental activities that are all well underway, we are happy to confirm the guidance for 2026 and the outlook for 2028. Our ambition is to grow adjusted EBT per share by a mid-single-digit percentage per year over this period. For the medium-term though, we are more ambitious, and I see considerable opportunities to propel Vonovia to the next level and generate accelerated growth towards the high single digits percentage as we aim to further accelerate and expand our non-rental growth initiatives and productivity gains. Much of this will be driven by three things. First, an AI-based true end-to-end process redesign for better performance and higher efficiencies.
Second, by leveraging our existing and largely digital interface to our customers for enhanced partner ecosystems to provide a wider range of services. Third, building a meaningful B2B business with our third-party management activities. A key prerequisite to chart this path for higher growth is a more ambitious stance on leverage. In addition to the organic deleveraging that is already underway, we'll now accelerate progress towards our new targets through a more proactive positioning towards disposals. Another area of change is disclosure. We are now showing you bottom line shareholder earnings after taxes and after minorities, and we are providing more color around our non-German exposure and development activities. Speaking of disclosure, we have also simplified our dividend policy into a much more straightforward version where we pursue a progressive dividend policy that aims to pay out between 50% and 60% of adjusted EBT.
For 2025, we will propose a dividend of EUR 1.25 to this year's AGM. With that, over to you, Philip, for our full year 2025 results.
Yes. Thank you, Luka, and welcome also from my side. We are very pleased with our performance last year. All our four segments showed meaningful growth for a total increase in Adjusted EBITDA of 6%. If you look at the rental segment, that was up 2.5%, and that in spite of the around 9,000 fewer units and slightly higher OpEx that was driven by inflation. Organic rent growth was 4.1%, of which 2.6% were market driven and 1.5% from investments. Occupancy, as you would expect, remained high, almost 98%, and the same goes for our collection rate with almost 100%.
In value-add, we saw an increase of 17% to EUR 198 million, and that was largely attributable to an increase in contribution from our craftsmen organization based on efficiency and volume increases, as well as the growing energy business. If you adjust for the EUR 58 million one-time effect from the Coke's lease agreement signed in 2024, the growth in this segment would have been even much higher. In recurring sales, we succeeded with our strategy of putting profitability first. While overall sales volumes were a bit below the prior year, we were able to realize much better fair value step-ups of 32%, and that increased the EBITDA contribution by 44% to EUR 83 million.
EBITDA in our development segment more than doubled to EUR 75 million, and as we have been reporting throughout last year, this was partly driven by land sales. Impacted by higher financing expenses and the higher share count triggered by the scrip dividends we paid last year, the adjusted EBT per share grew by 3.1% to EUR 2.29. Luka mentioned the new metric adjusted shareholder earnings, so adjusted EBT minus tax expenses and minorities. On a per share basis, that number came to EUR 1.85 in 2025, up 3.6% compared to the prior year. While minorities were 16% higher in 2025, taxes were 6% lower.
Our operating free cash flow was 3% below 2024, and the change is the result of higher cash payouts to minorities in context with the minority sale of Deutsche Wohnen for the domination agreement, an increase in capitalized maintenance, and a positive but smaller net working capital change as we ramp up our efforts in development to sell as well as in Manage to Green. I will get to valuation on the next slide, but the impact on EPRA NTA was that we have seen the first year-on-year per share growth since 2022, slightly above EUR 46 per share. The EPRA NTA was 2.3% higher than at the end of 2024. Finally, for this page, the three main debt KPIs.
Net debt to EBITDA was 13.8x , an improvement of 0.7x compared to the pro forma 2024 numbers. LTV was 45.4, 40 basis points below the 2024 pro forma numbers, and ICR was 3.8, 0.1 turn above 2024. Moving to the next page, the full year valuation resulted in a net value gain of 1.8% in 2025. That first is on a like-for-like basis, and second, without the rent growth brought by investments. As expected, there was an acceleration in H2 with 1.1% after the 0.7% we have seen in the H1 of last year. If you include investments, the full year growth is even 3.1%.
The chart on the lower left-hand side nicely captures the turnaround in values and the trajectory of an organic value growth that is largely driven by rental growth. As of the end of 2025, our standing assets had an aggregate value of EUR 80.7 billion, reflecting an in-place rent multiplier of 23.2x or an initial gross yield of 4.3%. Let's have briefly a look at the transaction market and valuation expectations, for the running year. First of all, the institutional transaction market saw the total deal volume of approximately EUR 9 billion last year. In terms of transaction activity and deal sizes, there were more transactions than in 2024, but the average deal size was smaller, though, with an increased activity also from international investors.
For the running year, 2026, residential is expected to remain the most attractive real estate asset class. Both Jones Lang LaSalle as well as CBRE anticipated transaction volume of up to EUR 2 billion, so a notch above what we have seen last year. The average value growth is estimated to be between 2%-4% by Jones Lang LaSalle and 2%-3% by CBRE. That actually confirms our assumption that organic rent growth net of investments should largely translate into organic value growth. Page six is a reminder of our EBITDA growth ambitions for 2026 and 2028, including the growing contribution from our non-rental activities. After 13% in 2025, we expect at least 15% for this year and then 20%-25% by 2028, so no change.
As growth in our rental segment is ultimately capped at some 5% annually because of the tight regulation in our markets, it's crucial for us that we increasingly focus on growing our adjacent businesses. Until 2028, we aim to deliver mid-single-digit Adjusted EBT growth on a per share basis. For the medium term then, supported by lower leverage and additional growth opportunities, our ambition is to grow Adjusted EBT at a high single-digit rate. Moving to page seven, Luka already mentioned that at the beginning, we have revisited our dividend policy and simplified it for a much more straightforward version. We pursue a progressive dividend policy and aim for a payout ratio between 50%-60% of Adjusted EBT. I know that the scrip option has been a topic for quite some debate, but it served specific purposes in the past.
In the early years, we issued new shares for the scrip option at or even above NTA, and that was a creative form of new equity to finance growth. In recent years, paying part of the dividend in scrip helped us to mitigate the cash outflow at a time when cash management was actually the priority. Now that neither is the case, we do not intend to offer a scrip option unless our shares trade much closer to NTA, and we define closer as a discount of no more than 10%. Specifically for 2025, we will be proposing a cash dividend of EUR 1.25, so 2.5% higher than last year to this year's AGM, which by the way, will be an in-person event in Bochum. With that, Luka, back to you.
Yeah. Thank you very much, Philip, and I look forward to hopefully seeing many of our investors in Bochum then for the AGM. As I said in my introductory remarks, in order to chart a path to high single-digit earnings growth in the medium term, we also need to take a more ambitious stance towards leverage. Now make no mistake, our rating outlook across the different rating agencies is stable and our relevant KPIs are improving already today, as Philip has shared. So the current leverage works very well from a rating agency point of view. But the fact of the matter is that we have to be mindful of the headwind from higher financing expenses. That is why we have defined tighter targets that we want to achieve by the end of 2028 for more balance sheet flexibility and bottom line shareholder growth.
Net Debt to EBITDA multiple of less than 12x and LTV of around 40% and ICR comfortably above 3x . These more stringent leverage targets will help us to accelerate the organic deleveraging process that is already underway via EBITDA growth and organic value growth from rent growth. In all of this, one thing is very important to me. All of our efforts to further reduce leverage will be measured against their medium and long-term impact on our business and our ability to create value for our shareholders. Our deleveraging efforts will include a more active pursuit of disposal opportunities. In this context, all options are on the table as we are also reviewing our minority positions in non-strategic participations, both here in Germany as well as in abroad.
The key message here is that our decisions will be guided by what is the most sustainable way to delever and not solely by what is the fastest solution. Why? Well, because we act from a position of strength in a much more conducive environment. This is not like the period between 2022- 2024, where we operated under the adverse circumstances of sharply increasing rates and declining values. Finally, in pursuing our new leverage targets, we are in no way departing from our 2028 EBITDA objectives. We actually aim to deliver on our targets and still delever faster than initially anticipated. With that, let me move on to page nine. Leverage is not the only area where we are changing course. We are committed to adequate, comprehensive and transparent investor communication.
With that in mind, we have revisited our disclosure and made a few changes. The first and possibly most relevant one is the introduction of a bottom line shareholder earnings metric that you can see on the right-hand side of page nine. Because of the increased relevance of taxes and minorities, we will now reconcile between Adjusted EBT and the new bottom line metric Adjusted Shareholder Earnings. We provide this column for both reported numbers and guidance. Please bear in mind that Adjusted EBT will remain the lead KPI to reflect our recurring earnings capacity, but there will now be full transparency of how much of that is attributable to shareholders. Another change you will see is increased disclosure on our non-German exposure, as well as on development.
Given the relative significance of these parts of our business, we agree with the market sentiment that both areas warrant more information so that investors get a better understanding of the dynamics and the value creation. Finally, a few words on the guidance and outlook. Philip already covered some of this, but please let me add a bit of color. The guidance on page 10 is very similar to what we showed you in November. We explicitly confirmed the guidance for 2026 and the outlook 2028. We will pursue the tighter leverage targets and deliver on our original objectives. One line item is new though, and this is Adjusted Shareholder Earnings, as covered before.
You may recall Philip's verbal guidance from the November call that we expect tax expenses of around 10% of Adjusted EBITDA total and minorities of around 10% of Adjusted EBT. We have now translated this into specific ranges to provide specific guidance for Adjusted Shareholder Earnings. When you look at this metric, though, please bear in mind that this is exactly what it says. It is an earnings number. It is not a cash flow proxy, as most of the cash we generate in our recurring sales and development segments is not included here because we cannot mix up earnings and cash in our accounts. The taxes on these sales, however, are included. That is why we also have the Operating Free Cash Flow, which was EUR 1.8 billion in 2025.
For 2026, we expect a similar magnitude net of working capital changes. They are the only moving part here, and will mainly depend on the volume of Manage to Green acquisitions in 2026. Now, looking beyond 2026, we clearly expect Adjusted Shareholder Earnings to grow on a per share basis. Also because dividends to minorities will no longer move up. The actual magnitude of the growth will largely depend then on disposals as well as the decision and economics around the Apollo call options. We do see potential for attractive growth in Adjusted Shareholder Earnings, but it is more challenging to guide for a couple of years out, and we may have a small lag compared to the Adjusted EBT growth in the near term.
Medium term, the combined effects from our strategic growth initiatives, the reduction in corporate income taxes and our accelerated deleveraging should pave the way for higher growth. We will assess this more precisely when we have progressed on the latter. With that, back to you, Rene, for Q&A.
Thank you, Luka. Thank you, Philip. Quick reminder before we start the Q&A, let's stick to the two-question policy, and if it's okay for you and the questions are not immediately related, let's tackle them one by one. That'll make it a bit easier to respond. With that, over to Sandra to open up the Q&A for us. Thank you.
Thank you, Rene. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on the telephone. You will hear a tone to confirm that you've entered a queue. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to disable the loudspeaker mode while asking a question. Anyone who has a question may press star and one at this time. Our first question comes from Charles Boissier from UBS. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking my questions, and best wishes in your new role. Two questions from my side. First, on the 2026 guidance you mentioned, specifically on the new Adjusted Shareholder Earnings, that it's earnings metric and not cash flow. Just wanted to clarify my understanding when you mentioned that, income taxes are for the core business. Does that mean that you do include in the Adjusted Shareholder Earnings the proceeds from sales related to recurring disposal, but you do not include the taxes associated to them? And if that's the case, what would be the tax impact from those sales? Associated to it as well on that metric, hopefully that's still only the first question, on the minorities position, do you think that it's an accounting metric there?
What would be therefore the cash minorities for 2026? Thank you.
I think that's one for Philip, but I would say on the first part, it's exactly the other way around. Please go ahead, Philip.
Yeah. Okay. On the operating free cash flow, what you will see is the cash impact on the minority sale to Deutsche Wohnen, which we have done in August last year. That is around EUR 70 million. That is an uptick. Anything else will really depend on how many Deutsche Wohnen shareholders will opt for the guaranteed dividend versus exchanging their holding in Deutsche Wohnen shares. Apart from that, those numbers are fairly stable on a cash metric vis-a-vis the respective minorities we've shown in the 2025 accounts.
On your first question on taxes, the Adjusted Shareholder Earnings include all taxes from our two disposal-related segments, and that is development to sell, and that is recurring sales. To be very clear, it's only the tax bit. It's not the capital we are freeing up as a result of those disposals. That is only what you see in the Operating Free Cash Flow. That's a very good example why you essentially cannot mix up in our more differentiated business model, the accounting metrics with cash metrics.
Okay, clear. My second question is on the CEO compensation metrics. Given all the new metric dividend payout change, deleveraging objective, is it possible to ask you what are the short-term and long-term incentive metrics that make your compensation? Thank you.
Yeah. They are actually unchanged from what you see in the compensation report for the executive board also in 2025. There has been no model change here. There is a qualifier in that compensation model for the exceedance of certain debt-related KPIs. We obviously are very certain given our ambitions that we will stay very well below those. Those might be in the future then subject to adjustment, but the core metrics themselves are absolutely unchanged. Please look them up in the compensation report. They will apply to me as well.
Yeah, I know them. Yeah. Thanks.
The next question comes from Bart Gysens from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, Bart Gysens from Morgan Stanley. My first question is on deleveraging. When you say that you're gonna take a more active or proactive pursuit of deleveraging, to what extent is that keeping net debt stable and letting the EBITDA and the portfolio valuation grow? Or are you actually pursuing to bring net debt down over the next three years? Thank you. That's the first question.
Yeah. Let me perhaps start with LTV and then work my way over to net debt to EBITDA, because obviously we are looking to trim down the absolute debt as well. On the LTV basis, we are now, as you know, at 45.4%, and we indeed believe, as Philip has shared before as well, that valuation will remain constructive. It has been so now since the H2 of 2024 that we have seen improvements, and we don't expect that this trend will stop. This will carry us a certain way.
With a reasonable assumption that rent growth should carry through to valuation growth, you would probably arrive somewhere at an LTV of around 43%, right? In order to reach the 40%, we need to do something on top, and that is working on the portfolio and actual deleveraging through sales. In that respect, we have a wide range of options that are all on the table, from accelerating our organic sales efforts in our privatization business through the sale of minority positions through our non-core portfolio, which is still quite significant with EUR 2 billion in our books. Also two additional core sales across the vast portfolio that we have there across three countries.
That will carry us to the 40. Then if you do the math on a net debt to EBITDA basis and just apply let's say the midpoint of our EBITDA guidance for 2028, this tells you already that with that alone, we would be at the 12x net debt to EBITDA corridor. With the additional color that I've given on the LTV, it obviously also tells you that in actual fact we will probably be quite a sizable bit below that 12x mark.
The answer is clearly we're going to work on the absolute debt levels as well, because our aim is to make sure that we see the headwind from interests dissipating to make then room for the full growth potential of our underlying operating business.
Okay. Thank you. Then my other question is on exactly the point you just mentioned, right? The 28 outlook on 20%-25% of between EUR 3.2 billion and EUR 3.5 billion that will be non-rental EBITDA. If I take the midpoint of that 20%-25% and the midpoint of the EBITDA, then we're looking at about more than EUR 750 million of non-rental EBITDA. Can you break that down? Because some of these points, you know, additional potential in digitalization and AI-based end-to-end process redesign, partner ecosystem, and B2B business, I understand all the words separately, but together I'm not entirely sure what that means. Can you help me understand what that is and actually how that would break down that EUR 750 million? Thank you.
Yeah, absolutely. First of all, it is what we have always defined as the opportunity, which means the growth that we expect in our value-add segment, in our recurring sales segment, and in our development segment. You have seen that across all of those three, we have made significant progress in 2025 already. In particular, in the value-add segment, a number of initiatives that we have only started to pilot in 2025, such as, for example, our push for a higher share of operate energy related revenues with the additional push towards photovoltaic and heat pump installations.
They're just now starting to scale up, so in the next few years, they will have a larger impact. In the recurring sales segment, we would in the future then also see the revenues from our Manage to Green initiatives. Once we have now made two acquisitions in Manage to Green for a total of EUR 110 million, close to 900 units. Once we have modernized them, then we would look to recycle them obviously and sell them out. That's what would show up there as well in addition to our normal privatization volumes.
That is all considered already in the share of that we have laid out, where the value-add segment should be 9%-12% of that total contribution, the recurring sales 5%-8%, and then the development segment 4%-5%. These additional opportunities that I've laid out, I think it's very important to understand where they would contribute. On AI, the beauty is that in our industry, AI can actually be a booster to both the top line as well as the bottom line through productivity. On the top line, I see great potential to speed up processes.
For example, across the end-to-end process life cycle of our investment process that ultimately leads into modernization work, either at an individual apartment level or a building level by scheduling tasks, we can actually accelerate the cycle time there, which would lead to faster revenue. At the same time we have big productivity opportunities. This would be a combination of top line and OpEx impacts that would actually accrue mainly to the rental segment one. Then, secondly, on the B2B business, which would be the operation of third-party portfolios, that would then also show up in the value-add segment and would obviously boost the growth even further.
If you ask me, value-add will be a very sizable business by 2028, boosted by those additional opportunities because B2B we're just getting started with now.
Great. Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Valérie Jacob from Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Hello, good afternoon. My first question is on your new metrics of adjusted shareholder earnings. I was just wondering, if I look at you know, what your peers are doing with this type of metric, usually depreciation is excluded, and you've decided to include it in this metric. I just wanted to understand you know, what is the rationale and why you did that. Also on this metrics, I was curious why not base the dividend distribution on this metric then, or why keep it on the EBT?
Yeah, Valérie, I think it's kind of a similar answer to the first question on adjusted EBT. It's an accounting metric for the more differentiated business model we have. Part of our business model is also in the energy business. Here predominantly in photovoltaic business, and that is causing the depreciation. You don't have depreciation if you are real estate only. That's kind of the trigger why we have decided to deduct depreciation because over time, in essence, that is something we need to earn because then replacement investments are necessary.
Okay. That's clear. On the distribution?
Yeah, on the distribution, that again, you have accounting-wise the minority share on the accounted profit, which is included in the minorities. Cash-wise, that is true for, in particular the Apollo joint ventures we did in 2023, that distribution may differ, and that is what you see in the Operating Free Cash Flow. Again, cash flow is different to accounting metrics, which is why it is important to look at both.
Also, if I may add, a matter of simplicity at the end of the day. We had a dividend policy before, which was based on Adjusted EBT too, but then added a quite complex cash-based consideration to it.
We think that a combination of the clear statement that dividend will be increasing progressively, given that we have also a mid-single digit growth ambition for Adjusted EBT and that we provide a range, is giving much more clarity. In that respect, we are essentially not really departing from what we have done in the past, just simplifying it.
Thank you. My second question is on your B2B business. You know we've been talking about developing this business for quite a while, and you still haven't made any announcement. I was just wondering if you could share, you know, why it's taking, you know, some time and, you know, when you think we can expect some announcement on this business. Thank you.
Yeah, thanks, for the question. First of all, we are in the B2B business already. We have actually a business of more than 70,000 units that we are already providing property management services to. We also have a range of customers both in the real estate industry and beyond for our facility management services. It's not that we are starting from a clean sheet of paper here. There are two different models under the B2B notion. One is what I would call à la carte, which is kind of more operational services like property management, like facility management that we provide to individual customers.
That is a business where we have a vast market out there, where we have actually incremental discussions all the time, and we are actually quite close to signing up additional customers, so on that one. As it is more operational in nature, not sure whether we would make a big announcement about adding more customers in this space. The other one is really what I would call the full menu option, where we would work with institutional investors to partner up and team up to service their acquired portfolios holistically across investment management, asset management, property management, and then additional value added services.
These are very strategic transactions, by definition, therefore, they are complex and will take more time, but obviously the contribution from them can be much more meaningful. In this respect, we are also in active conversations, but as always, I would prefer to talk about them once we have concluded them. I'm confident that we will have more to talk about in this respect as we progress through the year. By the way, this B2B business is also very helpful for us in the context of our plans to potentially dispose of additional portfolios.
Because in all of those areas where we were already the operator, for those portfolios, it's quite an obvious consideration then for any acquirer, to continue to benefit from the scale that we can offer in our platform and continue to operate those units, which obviously would provide us then, despite the fact that we would go for a disposal, with continued EBITDA contributions through the B2B notion.
Very clear. Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Thomas Rothäusler from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hi, welcome on board, Luka. I've got two questions. The first one is on earnings growth outlook. You target accelerated earnings growth from 2028 onwards, despite more disposals for deleveraging. Just wondering what are the key drivers here you assume?
Yeah, thanks a lot for the question. I mean, we're talking about the medium term post our 2028 ambition, obviously. There are a couple of levers in this respect. First of all, the ones that we have already talked about. All of the continued strong contributions from our non-rental areas will certainly continue, and we will add to this growing stream of B2B revenues plus the additional opportunities that we see from a productivity perspective through new technologies. That obviously goes without saying. We obviously expect that through the deleveraging that we provide we will see the headwind from the interest costs coming down.
Plus, as we refinance our debt, we bring down the gap between historic interest levels that define our current debt stack and the one that we will see a couple of years from now. This will not be a big headwind anymore. Therefore, the way to think about the overarching growth profile is we will have a rock solid core rental business with extreme stickiness and 5% growth on the top line as we have guided for. You add to that a much stronger growth across the non-rental initiatives.
You add the additional boost from technology, and B2B, and you see the headwind dissipating, and that in aggregate obviously will make room for that higher growth.
Okay. Thank you. One follow-up on disposals. I mean, what will be the focus of disposals, and at what terms are you willing to dispose assets?
Yeah. Well, as I said before, really everything is on the table. What is on display? One, we see scope to accelerate our organic privatization business. Last year, we have sold 2,333 units. We see no reason why this should not move up quite a bit. I think 3,000 units-3,500 units should be readily possible, perhaps even a notch more than that. We have been mentioning non-strategic equity participations, minority positions that we hold, domestically and abroad. These sum up to roughly EUR 0.5 billion .
To give you one example, we are a small minority stakeholder in Vesteda, the Dutch entity that is currently going through its redemption process, and we are participating in that. That alone is a value of around EUR 200 million. In addition to that, we have our non-core portfolio with EUR 2.3 billion each in commercial as well as in nursing assets, and the rest in non-core residential assets. We'll certainly look at accelerating the sale of those. As these are for the most part higher yielding ones, it should be actually quite plausible to assume that we can sell them off quite well.
We have our large core portfolio across three countries, Sweden, Austria, Germany, where we really want to leave all of our options on the table and see how demand is shaping up, and what is of main interest in all of this. You have asked about our positioning towards those. I think it's a combination. We will be disciplined for sure. We will be guided by how we drive for most sustainable value creation. That means, of course, that we want to realize proper values for any transactions.
We will also be pragmatic where we can, like, for example, in the non-core area, where already in the past we have been, I would say, properly positioned between being stringent and flexible where necessary. With all of that, plus the fact that the transaction market, as Philip has said, is in a more constructive shape, I would say, than a couple of years ago, and the fact that, in aggregate, we are probably talking about maximum mid-single digit billion euros amount of transactions, we should really be able to do this the right way and with the right value creation.
Don't forget that in the last few years, under much less conducive conditions, the company was quite successful with selling an even higher amount of assets. We are confident that we can repeat it and drive for appropriate values to be realized.
Okay. Thank you.
The next question comes from Veronique Meertens from Van Lanschot Kempen. Please go ahead.
Hey, good afternoon all. Thank you for the presentation and taking my questions. My first question is a bit of a follow-up on also the deleveraging and the disposals. I was just curious. Obviously, a lot is happening in the markets in the world over the last two weeks, especially since yesterday. We are now looking at potential rate hikes. I'm just curious how this is changing your view, because I also just heard you mention that you still expect a similar trend in terms of value gains. I'm just wondering if this has changed anything in the last two weeks with your stance towards staying still pretty disciplined in terms of disposals.
Veronique, I think things that have not really changed. The real estate market is not functioning on a daily basis. Due diligence terms take some time. If I purely look at the refinancing environment, yes, we've seen an impact of roughly 30 basis points increase in financing terms as a result of the crisis in the Middle East. I think we have to wait and see how that develops. For now, no change in discussions we are having on the investor side.
Stating the obvious, we are developing or we are looking at the developments in the Middle East and I think as a principal matter, are well advised to drive our capital structure a bit more to the conservative side as explained.
Okay. Thank you. Secondly, on the new metric that adjusts the shareholder earnings, I was wondering if you could elaborate. Have you thought about actually going to FFO one and FFO two to make it a bit more comparable to peers where you still can show an FFO two, obviously the other two business lines, and what was the reason to actually come up with the Adjusted Shareholder Earnings?
Again, we have to differentiate between accounting and cash returns. When you have a business, which is not only about the rental business, but which has, in particular also a development business and a privatization business, the FFO metric is simply not the right metric to look at. We have been discussing before in the privatization context, that one element is the profit you make, post-tax. The other element is what capital you free up. The same applies to the development segment, and that's why we have to differentiate between the two. If you look at our operating free cash flow, all ingredients are there that you can actually see what cash flow our business is producing.
Okay. I appreciate that. There are also peers of you that also have a development segment or recurring sales segment, right? That should then encounter the same problem.
Might be the case. If at all it's one and at very slow or low bit, as I understand the numbers. Again, you have to account for the cash flow the business is producing. The FFO concept is simply not doing the trick. Operating free cash flow, if you go through the various metrics, you see that one by one, on top we are guiding on the operating free cash flow, so you actually know what to expect for the running year, net of changes in working capital as Luka explained. That's kind of what I can say about it.
Okay. That's clear. Thank you.
The next question comes from Pierre-Emmanuel Clouard from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Yes. Thank you. Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my question. My first one is actually on your disposal plan strategy. You want to review your non-strategic participation in Germany and abroad. But would you contemplate a full or partial exit from Sweden to accelerate deleveraging? Maybe also if you can remind us your main minority positions in non-strategic participation outside Germany would be helpful.
Yeah. On that last one, very quickly, it's really mainly the Vesteda participation. The rest are German participations for the most part, for all practical purposes. That's this piece. On Sweden, when I said everything is on the table, that includes Sweden, absolutely. A few statements on Sweden, perhaps. First of all, it's really a fine business. I would not be surprised if it was attracting attention and interest. Svein Erik Lilleland, our CEO there is doing a terrific job. You have seen now from the additional disclosure that also the operating metrics are actually in quite a good health. It's not a small business.
It's a large business with EUR 7 billion value attached to it. So it would be a large chunk for anyone to acquire completely. That may be different if only a partial transaction might be at stake. Again, we will consider all options. I want to make it also very clear that there are alternatives for Sweden that I find very interesting too. In particular, Sweden could be similarly to our German platform a very good platform on which we can expand third-party B2B services to other players in the market. This is certainly an ambition that we would also look into.
Either with the scope of a disposal or without, because as I explained before, you could very well in the context of also partial disposals think about continuing to provide B2B services.
Okay. Interesting. Maybe a quick follow-up on that. Would you contemplate a potential spin-off of Sweden to maybe let other shareholders enter the and grow the platform outside Vonovia?
Well, look, this is all highly speculative. As we said, we are extremely open and we will look at all possible options. Let me come back to the trade-off discussion here. Couple of years ago, we were all going after speed and transaction certainty. As a result of that, there were also some transactions closed that were highly complex and at the same time, in the long run, also are costing a bit more over time.
As we have now the time and as we can really look at the full scale of opportunities and options, we want to make sure to also give due consideration to simplicity in going after the deleveraging and sustainability of value creation. We will always properly weigh this against the different options that we have. Nothing is off the table in this respect, and it would not be wise to do so at the beginning of the journey.
Okay. Understood. My second question is on your capital allocation, actually, as you are trading at a material discount to your NAV. Would you contemplate any share buyback maybe, or is the 40% target first and then you could consider a share buyback?
Yeah.
Deleveraging comes first, and that is our target, and debt-financed share buyback is currently not on the cards.
Yeah. Also from my perspective, I mean, I'm certainly not having a religious stance either for or against share buybacks. In my last two roles at other companies, I've done sizable share buybacks, but they are a useful instrument in the toolbox if you have excess cash available, and that is clearly not the case at the moment. Let us first progress on what drives the most value for our stakeholders, which I would argue is the deleveraging. Yeah.
Okay. That's clear. Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Marc Mozzi from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much. My question is around trying to square a circle around the fact that previously you had mid-single earnings growth, no disposals, and now you have the same growth target and about EUR 4 billion- EUR 6 billion of disposals implicitly guided. Can you help me to bridge that gap and tell me which area of the business is gonna grow faster now than was previously targeted?
Yeah, let me give it a try, and then, if I'm not succeeding, Philip can add to it. It's at the EBT level where we have guided for mid-single-digit growth. It's actually, first of all, a straightforward statement. If we dispose of core property units, let's carve out the minority stakes for the time being, then, yes, of course, we would lose rental income and hence some EBITDA, but we would gain almost the same amount in terms of interest gains, under reasonable assumptions for the interest rates development. At the EBT level, it would be fairly a wash, right? That's the first one.
On the EBITDA side, as I tried to explain, as we are losing EBITDA when we sell off our properties, we might not lose all of it, because a good portion might come back through us continuing to operate these premises under our B2B notion. Second, I think you are seeing already today on our trajectory that we are on a very good path. Our guidance for EBITDA in 2026 is at the midpoint at EUR 3 billion, so EUR 200 million up from last year. If you just simply extrapolate this, it obviously gets you into a very, very comfortable zone on the 2028 ambition.
Hence, the subtraction of some EBITDA from disposals is still manageable within that context. Third, within the ramp-up of our non-rental businesses, as I said at the beginning too, there are ones that today are not really contributing yet to the trajectory because they have just been piloted or in POC mode in 2025, but they are ramping up now, such as, for example, our additional energy installations, and they will contribute more in the years to come. All of that in combination will make sure that we arrive at the targets.
Okay. I would love to say I understand, but actually I'm not sure I get that clear. It looks like your share price is in the same position that I am. My second question is around what sort of debt product would you like to issue to face your upcoming refinancing, which is around EUR 4 billion-EUR 5 billion every year?
I mean, first of all, this year it's 2.7 still remaining because we have retired some with the refinancing we did in November last year. The mix, Marc, is as usual. We will predominantly look at the corporate bond market and that across currency to diversify our risk profile. I think I've made also clear that I see potential for some additional convertible product, which is a pure debt product to be, again, very clear on that point and also accounted at 100% as debt in our statements. Here I do see market capacity in between 10%-15% of market cap in that product.
Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Paul May from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Hi, guys. Two separate questions from me. Now that you're kindly showing the shareholder earnings, which obviously show the impact or the dilutive impact of actions that previous management had taken in terms of selling assets, and they're 20% below your management KPIs and even lower on a cash basis, and we can debate that as to what should or shouldn't be included. On a cash side, I just wonder, Luka, coming in as an outsider, why do you feel that there's significant misalignment between management KPIs and shareholder income or earnings is appropriate? Earlier you mentioned that Vonovia successfully sold, disposals or sold assets in the past, but as you've shown today, those were quite detrimental to shareholder earnings.
Just wondered, does that mean moving forward that because the KPIs are different, you're willing to do things that are good for management KPIs but not good for shareholder KPIs? Just wondered how you are sort of thinking about that in the disposals moving forward and how you think about that misalignment?
Well, first of all, I'm sorry to say, but I think the majority of the disposals that the company did in the past few years were not detrimental to shareholder earnings. They were straightforward in that sense. You probably refer to the structured transactions that were different in nature. At the time, to be fair, I think they were the best path forward for the company to raise equity, where otherwise a straight raise would have been far more expensive and far more dilutive to shareholders. Now we are in different situation, and we have different tools and a wider range of opportunities at our disposal. We will obviously prioritize also for simplicity.
Just wanted to make clear that this is the case. Look on the metrics, to be quite honest, I've been having discussions even before my onboarding here with Vonovia, with some of the key shareholders of the company, as well as some analysts, to get a sense of what are the topics that are burning. Clearly, deleveraging came out as the number one topic, and we're addressing it today. There was the notion for sure that disclosure metrics and the change a couple of years ago was not necessarily liked by everyone.
There was also the notion that completely changing upside down, again, the set of metrics, would also not be the right path forward. What I believe is important is that we provide transparency on the items that really matter, and that is the true bottom-line contribution that we have laid out today, reconciling back from EBT to the impact of taxes and minorities. You have that transparency now, and over the next few years, we will work hard to make sure that this metric is growing as we have discussed before and is moving into the right direction.
Okay. Sorry, just following on from that bit. The EBT is going up, and the shareholder earnings are going down year-on-year. Just wonder why that misalignment isn't an issue for you, and why you think that the previous actions have been good for shareholders versus management KPIs. Sorry, just following up on that. I'm struggling to understand.
Yeah. Again, just very briefly, and then we can take it perhaps offline, in a separate conversation. We believe that the metric will grow in the future for a variety of reasons, as we discussed before. That alignment in the future should certainly be given.
Okay, perfect. Thank you. Just a second question. Just wondered when were your budgets last updated in terms of the guidance? Obviously, there's been a significant move in underlying rates and in margins post the Middle East conflict flaring up. I appreciate that may not continue, but expectations are now for some rate increases and changes there. I think Philip mentioned that all-in financing cost is only up 30 basis points since the start of the conflict. I just wonder how you can reconcile that with the roughly 50 basis points move in swaps and margins that have also moved out by 10 basis points-20 basis points, if not potentially more.
I'm just struggling to understand how that relates back to a 30 basis points and when the budgets were updated, because I think LEG last updated in October when swap rates were 2.25%, and they're now 2.8%. Just wondering if timing is also an issue that we should be considering. Thank you.
Look, I mean, we do budgeting certainly in acknowledgment of spot rates, but we also run some sensitivities, and we have some safety buffer in terms of the interest rates we assume. The 4.3% we are currently talking about for 10 years or the 4% we are talking about for eight years.
Is very much in line with what we have been budgeting.
Okay. Barry, you had some wiggle room, as you say, within the guidelines already.
Could have.
Yeah, could have. Perfect. Thank you.
The next question comes from Thomas Neuhold from Kepler Cheuvreux. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Thank you for the presentation. Thank you for my questions. I have a couple of questions on the development business. Firstly, I was wondering where you currently stand at reaching the EUR 3,600 construction cost target for some of your new projects. Secondly, I was wondering the current project you have in the pipeline for the build to sale business, is this mainly geared to retail or institutional investors? I was also wondering, you still have quite a large land bank, and in the past you were mentioning that you're considering some disposals here. Can you please provide us an update on where you stand here? Thank you.
Yeah. Let me quickly start on the development cost, and then for the rest, I will hand over to Philip. On the development cost, we're actually making very good progress on the new projects that we are starting. The EUR 3,600 is actually a standard that we can reach. We could actually go even below that, but that then depends really on the acceptance also of municipalities of all of the new possibilities, and our ability to really go ahead with our base buildings that we have constructed. But it helps obviously that we have a growing share of serial building partners, not only Gropyus, but also others. The more we can bring them to bear, the more solid this gets.
Obviously, we're still working down a legacy list of projects where this is not the case, but on the new stuff, this is actually working quite well.
Disposals are geared to retail. It's the market which works much better and where we can get better gross margins. Yes, we are still looking to free up capital in the development space, that is part of our deleveraging exercise, if you will.
Okay. Thank you.
The next question comes from Aaron Guy from Citi. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi there. Thanks for taking the question. I just wanna revisit the guidance for 2026 Adjusted Shareholder Earnings. You know, you're including the tax increases presumably from higher recurring sort of sales. From what you said earlier, you're not including the cash flow or the profits of offsetting that. Is that 2026 guidance therefore not somewhat overly conservative?
It's not a cash flow metric. Accounting wise, I cannot account for the freeing up of capital in an earnings metric because it's not an earning, it's a cash flow. Yes, you are right. The higher tax is a result of higher disposals. It's kind of the success we are projecting. The freeing up of capital is what you see in the Operating Free Cash Flow.
Okay. Understood. Just secondly on sort of longer term, sort of capital allocation. You mentioned earlier that the combination of asset sales, probably support from the market as well, might see your leverage metrics drop below the guidance level. Look, how do you see the business? You know, your predecessors sort of saw it more as a pan European residential sort of company. Do you see it that way? When you think about sort of five-year capital allocation decisions, you know, shareholder value has been destroyed in the past, not on asset sales, but actually on asset and business acquisitions. Would you look to then take that leverage and give it back to shareholders?
What sort of return criteria would you look to do if you got into a situation where leverage was below those metrics and you had capacity to invest?
Look, first of all, I mean, M&A and/or planting the flag of Vonovia into additional countries is not a self-serving purpose. Right? It has to create value for our shareholders. The appetite for doing so at the current cost of capital, where our shares are trading and our priorities and the great opportunities that we see within our parameters to grow through additional non-rental services, through the rock solid rental business that we have there, through additional opportunities in productivity increases. Our B2B business are absolutely significant, and we will stay focused on that. M&A or geographic expansion through M&A is not in our cards.
What might be different is the opportunity to serve investors in their properties with our B2B platform, which may also extend above and beyond the three countries in which we do business today. That's a credible scenario, and we have some opportunities that we're working on where this might be the case. That's what we're focused on. Hence once we reach our leverage levels, then we would look at staying there and not creeping up again through adventures on the M&A front.
Understood. Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's question and answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Rene for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Sandra, and thanks everybody for dialing in and joining this call. As always, if you have any questions or follow-up, you know where to find me, and you know where to find the team, so feel free to ask. Luka, Philip, and I will be on the road quite a bit now, and we're looking forward to connecting with you in the days and weeks ahead. That concludes today's call. As always, stay safe, happy and healthy. Bye for now. Thank you. Bye-bye.
Thank you.
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