Deutsche Bank moved Huhtamaki Oyj (HE:HUH1V) down one notch on Wednesday, changing its recommendation from "buy" to "hold" and reducing the price target to €33 from €38. The Finnish packaging group is confronting a combination of persistent input cost inflation and signs of softer consumer demand, conditions the bank says may depress near-term profitability.
Analyst view and earnings revisions
Kevin Fogarty, the analyst leading the call, warned that Huhtamaki's ability to pass higher costs onto customers may be strained as ongoing raw material and energy price inflation converges with weak consumer demand and heightened competition in the market. In response to those concerns, Deutsche Bank cut its forecast for adjusted earnings per share for fiscal year 2026 by roughly 4% and trimmed FY27 expectations by about 3%.
Those forecast reductions reflect what the brokerage described as risks associated with a delayed recovery of input costs. Fogarty said the adjustments were made preemptively to account for those recovery risks in the firm's modeling.
Margins and historical sensitivity
While Huhtamaki has attempted to mitigate the impact of rising costs through price increases, Deutsche Bank pointed to a historical pattern in which periods of inflationary cost pressure have coincided with margin volatility at the company. The bank flagged that pattern as a source of near-term earnings risk.
Implications for investors
The downgrade and downward revision of the price target reflect Deutsche Bank's assessment that the combination of cost inflation, weak demand and competitive dynamics could limit the pace and extent of margin recovery. The brokerage's preemptive cuts to its EPS forecasts are intended to build those risks into its valuation.
Note: The article presents Deutsche Bank's change in rating, the new price target, EPS forecast adjustments and the analyst commentary as stated by the bank.