Stock Markets April 9, 2026 05:14 AM

Jefferies Lifts Rexel to Buy, Cites Data Centre Momentum and Pricing Tailwinds

Broker raises target to €43.10 and forecasts mid-term earnings and margin expansion driven by pricing, data centre growth and productivity gains

By Derek Hwang RXL
Jefferies Lifts Rexel to Buy, Cites Data Centre Momentum and Pricing Tailwinds
RXL

Jefferies upgraded Rexel to a buy rating and increased its price target to €43.10 from €32, implying about 27% upside from the prior close of €33.90. The broker raised 2026-27 estimates, pointed to continued strong growth in data centres, favourable pricing dynamics and margin expansion potential, while describing current guidance as conservative.

Key Points

  • Jefferies upgraded Rexel to buy and raised its price target to €43.10 from €32, implying roughly 27% upside from the prior close of €33.90.
  • Analyst revisions lift revenue estimates from €19.41 billion in 2025 to €21.06 billion in 2027, with EBITA projected to increase from €1.16 billion to €1.41 billion over the same period and EPS of €2.45 in 2026 and €3.02 in 2027.
  • Primary drivers named include pricing tailwinds (including copper-related effects), continued strong growth in data centres, and recovery in selected industrial and construction markets; these factors influence electrical distribution, construction, industrial and data centre sectors.

Jefferies has moved Rexel (EPA:RXL) from a hold to a buy recommendation and lifted its one-year price objective to €43.10 from €32. The new target implies roughly 27% upside relative to the stock's previous close of €33.90 and stimulated a positive reaction in the share price on Thursday.

In its research note, Jefferies said it sees an "attractive setup for Rexel into 2026 with significant price tailwinds, recovery in select industrial & construction markets as well as another year of strong growth in data centers," and added that group guidance "look(s) conservative."

The brokerage increased its forecasts by 3-5% and now models revenue rising from €19.41 billion in 2025 to €20.15 billion in 2026 and €21.06 billion in 2027. Jefferies projects EBITA to climb from €1.16 billion in 2025 to €1.28 billion in 2026 and €1.41 billion in 2027, with earnings per share at €2.45 in 2026 and €3.02 in 2027.

Valuation assumptions behind the new target are anchored on a 14x P/E multiple applied to 2027 estimates, up from the 12x multiple used previously. Jefferies noted that the stock is trading at a substantially larger discount than its historical norms versus key peers such as Wesco and other global electrical distributors.

Pricing is highlighted as a principal earnings driver. Jefferies pointed to the distribution model's sensitivity to inflation, saying there is "very high drop through to margins of additional revenues generated from price." The broker singled out rising copper prices, pricing in industrial automation, and indirect effects stemming from developments in the Middle East as contributors to the pricing environment.

The note underscores exposure to cyclical improvements in construction and industrial end markets, citing improving indicators in the United States and China and a pickup in residential permit trends across parts of Europe. Jefferies quantified end-market exposure, saying roughly 30% of U.S. revenue exposure is linked to industrial activity while about 40% of European exposure is tied to residential markets.

Data centres are identified as a high-growth segment for the group. Jefferies estimates data centres represent about 13% of U.S. sales and 5% of consolidated group sales. The business is approaching €1 billion in annual revenue after expanding by 50% in the prior year, and management is guiding to another year of "20%+" growth.

Margin expansion is a central theme in Jefferies' outlook. Current margin levels are near 6%, with a mid-term aspiration above 7%. The broker expects operating leverage, ongoing pricing, restructuring actions in the U.K. and Germany, and productivity improvements from digital and artificial intelligence initiatives to support margin progression. Jefferies quantified productivity potential from these initiatives in the range of 20-30%.

On a valuation basis, Jefferies observed that "RXL can deliver DD EPS CAGR mid-term trading on 12x P/E 2027e only," while also noting that consensus earnings remain below prior peak levels.


Implications: The upgrade reflects Jefferies' view that pricing dynamics, recovery in certain end markets and continued rapid expansion in data centre demand underpin a path to higher revenues, improved EBITA and rising margins through 2027, supporting a higher multiple and upward revision to the price target.

Risks

  • Guidance and earnings remain below prior peak levels, leaving execution risk if recovery or pricing momentum stalls - this could impact electrical distribution and industrial earnings.
  • Exposure to commodity-driven input costs such as copper and to geopolitical developments (noted as indirect Middle East impacts) introduces volatility to margins and pricing pass-through.
  • Concentration in end markets - about 30% of U.S. exposure tied to industrial activity and roughly 40% of European exposure linked to residential markets - means macro weakness in those regions or sectors could weigh on results.

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