Stock Markets April 2, 2026

Morgan Stanley pares Neste rating, cites policy risk after strong rally

Broker moves to equal-weight and trims target to €27 as mandates and rising fuel costs raise political scrutiny

By Maya Rios
Morgan Stanley pares Neste rating, cites policy risk after strong rally

Morgan Stanley downgraded Neste Corporation to equal-weight from overweight and cut its price target to €27 from €28.50 after the company's shares have rallied roughly 40% year-to-date, leaving limited upside in the broker's view. The firm highlighted that earnings upgrades have been realised and warned that renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) prices - supported by blending mandates - face increasing political scrutiny amid a sharp rise in diesel and jet fuel costs. The note set multi-year EPS, net debt and margin assumptions and outlined bull and bear valuation cases.

Key Points

  • Morgan Stanley downgraded Neste to equal-weight from overweight and cut its price target to 27 from 28.50 following a roughly 40% year-to-date rally that the broker says leaves limited upside.
  • The bank highlighted heightened policy risk for blending mandates that support renewable diesel and SAF prices, noting diesel and jet fuel prices have more than doubled since the start of 2026.
  • Morgan Stanley provided multi-year forecasts and scenarios: EPS of 1.66 (2026), 1.68 (2027), 2.08 (2028); net debt falling from 3,816m (2025) to 293m (2028); margin assumptions and bull/bear valuations at 39 and 15 per share respectively.

Morgan Stanley has lowered its view on Neste Corporation, moving the stock to an "equal-weight" rating from "overweight" and reducing its price target to 27 from 28.50. The downgrade follows a roughly 40% rally in Neste shares so far this year, which the bank says has materially narrowed potential upside.

In its research note, analysts said that earnings upgrades for the Finnish renewable fuels producer have already been reflected in the share price and that policy developments pose growing headwinds. They pointed to blending mandates - a key factor supporting renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel prices - as increasingly subject to political scrutiny as conventional fuel prices climb.

Diesel and jet fuel prices have more than doubled since the start of 2026, the note said, intensifying debate over mandates and subsidies that underwrite higher-priced renewable fuel streams. "The debate to shift towards policy risk as first interventions emerge globally," analysts said.

"The debate to shift towards policy risk as first interventions emerge globally," analysts said.

Morgan Stanley singled out Sweden's 2023 policy change as the clearest example of the type of intervention that can dent renewable fuel demand. In 2023 Sweden cut its greenhouse gas reduction target for diesel from 40% to 6%. S&P Global estimated that decision removed roughly one million tonnes of annual renewable diesel demand, equal to about 5% of the global market.

The bank noted that Neste shares underperformed the broader European energy sector by approximately 10% in the month surrounding Sweden's move. Sweden's diesel target has not been returned to its former level and currently stands at 10%.

Other recent policy signals reinforced the firm's concerns. Singapore delayed its planned 1% SAF mandate by one year, Germany's lower house removed the RED III vote from its parliamentary agenda, and Italy postponed its coal phase-out from 2025 to 2038. Morgan Stanley framed these developments as examples of how mandate implementation and broader policy timelines can shift unpredictably.

On the company's financial outlook, Morgan Stanley projected earnings per share of 1.66 for fiscal 2026, increasing modestly to 1.68 in 2027 and 2.08 in 2028. Those EPS figures translate to valuation multiples of 16.8x, 16.7x and 13.5x for 2026, 2027 and 2028 respectively under the bank's base-case assumptions.

The brokerage expects Neste's net debt to fall from 3,816 million in 2025 to 293 million by 2028. In modelling product economics, Morgan Stanley assumed renewable products margins averaging $725 per tonne in 2026, before normalising to $650 per tonne in subsequent years.

Under a bull scenario predicated on sustained spot margins of $1,200 per tonne, Morgan Stanley's valuation work points to a share price of 39. By contrast, a bear case in which markets revert to oversupply implies a price of 15 per share - a 46% decline from current levels cited in the note.

The bank's base-case normalised free cash flow is forecast at 1,997 million, or 2.60 per share, which equates to an implied yield of roughly 9% on present valuations, according to the research note.

Analyst positioning on Neste remained mixed. Of those tracked on Refinitiv, 48% carried an "overweight" rating, 30% an "equal-weight" rating and 22% an "underweight" rating. The consensus price target range reported spans 12.10 to 35.

Finally, Morgan Stanley noted a potential commercial relationship: the bank said it expects to seek investment banking compensation from Neste within the next three months.


Context and implications

The note underscores that the interplay between commodity prices and public policy can materially affect the economics of renewable fuel producers. High diesel and jet fuel prices have supported stronger renewable product margins, but evolving mandates and governmental decisions can quickly alter demand trajectories that underpin those margins.

Risks

  • Policy changes to blending mandates or greenhouse gas targets - such as Sweden's 2023 reduction and recent delays or legislative inaction in Singapore, Germany and Italy - can reduce demand for renewable diesel and SAF, impacting the renewable fuels sector and energy markets.
  • Commodity price volatility - with diesel and jet fuel prices more than doubling since the start of 2026 - can alter the economics supporting renewable product margins and affect cash flow and valuations for producers.
  • Market oversupply risk - a return to oversupply could compress margins and, in Morgan Stanley's bear case, drive the share price materially lower, posing downside risk to investors in the renewable fuels and broader energy sectors.

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