Numbers

Figures converted from EUR/DKK at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.

The Numbers

Novonesis is the world's largest industrial-biosolutions company — enzymes, probiotics and microbial cultures sold into food, feed, bioenergy, household care and human health. Since the Novozymes/Chr. Hansen combination closed on 29 January 2024 and the Feed Enzyme Alliance (DSM-Firmenich stake) buyout in 2025, the P&L has three distinct regimes: a high-margin standalone Novozymes (2020-2023, ~33% adj. EBITDA margin on ~$2.2bn sales), a merger-reset 2024 (~$4.0bn reported, goodwill ballooning to $5.8bn, a one-off PPA drag), and a cleaner 2025 ($4.88bn sales, 37.1% adj. EBITDA margin, 7% organic growth). The stock now trades at roughly 41x IFRS trailing EPS and 26x adjusted-ex-PPA EPS against a consensus 2026 P/E of 33x — a structural quality premium hinged on the adjusted EBITDA margin holding 37-38% while capex steps up to 12-14% of sales for the 2030 GROW plan. That margin trajectory, and whether the Agriculture/Energy/Tech unit re-accelerates from Q4's 0% organic growth, is the single lever most likely to rerate or derate this name.

All financial statement figures are converted to USD from EUR (reporting currency) at period-end rates; share price and dividends are converted to USD from DKK (listing currency, Nasdaq Copenhagen). Pro-forma 2024 numbers treat Chr. Hansen as if owned from Jan 1, 2024.

Snapshot

Share price (USD)

60.0

Market cap (USD bn)

27.9

FY2025 revenue (USD m)

4,884

FY2025 adj. EBITDA margin (%)

37.1

Consensus target (USD, 17 analysts)

71.4

Upside to target (%)

19.3

Market cap (USD bn)

27.9

Shares outstanding (m)

468.3

1. Is this a well-run business that will still be around in 10 years?

No Results

Novonesis scores well on the durability questions: a 37% adjusted EBITDA margin, mid-single-digit organic growth, a 59% adjusted gross margin and NIBD/EBITDA comfortably under 2x. The catch is ROIC: including the $6.6bn of goodwill from Chr. Hansen, adjusted ROIC is just 5.6%. Excluding goodwill it recovers to 10.1% — not great, not disastrous — and the 2030 strategy explicitly targets organic ROIC expansion as cost and revenue synergies annualise.

2. Revenue & earnings power — 5-year view

Only 5 years of clean IFRS history are available; Novonesis as a reporting entity was created on 29-Jan-2024. Pre-2024 figures reflect Novozymes standalone, so year-on-year comparability is limited. We show both IFRS-reported and key pro-forma markers for context.

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Revenue nearly doubled in 2024 from consolidating Chr. Hansen, and 2025 is the first clean year under the combined perimeter — 7% organic growth plus merger synergies driving EBIT ex-special items to $1,037m, a new high.

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The headline is not a fall in the true margin — adjusted EBITDA margin expanded from 33.2% in 2023 to 37.1% in 2025 — but an optical drag from IFRS 3 purchase-price-allocation amortisation. Reported EBIT margin dropped from 26% to 17% in 2024 on PPA step-ups, then recovered to 21% in 2025 as synergies annualised.

Quarterly direction (last 8 quarters, IFRS)

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3. Cash generation — are the earnings real?

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Cash conversion is unusually clean. Operating cash flow of $1,435m in 2025 was 2.1x reported net profit — driven by the non-cash PPA amortisation that suppresses reported earnings. On a 5-year trailing basis, cumulative OpCF is $4.30bn vs cumulative net profit of $2.46bn, a CFO/NI ratio of 175%. FCF before acquisitions rose 16% y/y to $905m despite capex stepping up to 11.3% of sales from 9.4%.

4. Capital allocation — last 5 years

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Capital allocation is disciplined but has pivoted hard to growth: capex is rising toward 12-14% of sales for the 2030 GROW plan (production-capacity expansion), 2025 absorbed $1.79bn in net acquisitions (buying out DSM-Firmenich's Feed Enzyme Alliance stake), dividends of $473m were paid ($1.02 per share for 2025 vs $0.86 in 2024), and the group re-opened share buybacks at modest scale ($117m). With NIBD/EBITDA at 1.9x vs target ~1.7x, buybacks are likely capped until leverage eases.

5. Balance sheet — goodwill, debt and the shape of the merger

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The balance-sheet story is simple: goodwill of $6.6bn now represents 34% of total assets — the Chr. Hansen transaction set the bar for what Novonesis must out-earn. Net debt jumped to $3.20bn in 2025 on the Feed Enzyme Alliance acquisition, but NIBD/EBITDA at 1.9x remains below the 2x the market typically treats as an investment-grade ceiling, and management has guided leverage back to ~1.7x by year-end 2026. The ~$1.9bn bond issue in March 2026 replaces the bridge facility.

6. Valuation — what the market is paying

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The stock peaked at $76.30 at end-2021, de-rated sharply through 2022 on merger-arb and macro concerns, then traded sideways through the Chr. Hansen integration. Today's $59.97 is ~24% off the 2021 peak despite revenue roughly doubling — the rerating work is still ahead.

No Results

12m target (USD)

71

Upside to target (%)

19.3

Adj. EBITDA margin

37.1

Depending on which earnings line you trust, Novonesis trades at 26x (adjusted ex-PPA) to 41x (IFRS) trailing. The forward 2026 consensus P/E of 33x compares to MarketScreener's sector median (specialty chemicals) EV/EBITDA of ~7.3x; Novonesis trades at ~20x trailing EV/EBITDA — a structural premium consistent with its 37% margins, mid-single-digit organic growth, and the regulatory moat of its enzyme IP and fermentation manufacturing base.

7. Peer comparison — biosolutions / industrial chemistry

No Results

Peer multiples are approximate TTM estimates from recent sell-side and MarketScreener snapshots; used only for relative positioning.

Novonesis is the highest-margin, fastest-growing integrated biosolutions pure-play in the set. Givaudan trades richer on P/E (32x vs 26x) but has half the EBITDA-growth profile and a similar margin; IFF and DSM-Firmenich trade at lower multiples because both carry execution risk from prior mega-mergers that have yet to recover their pre-deal earnings. The ~20x EV/EBITDA Novonesis commands is the tax for being the cleanest name in a messy industry.

8. Fair value — bear / base / bull

No Results

The base case of ~$71.43 sits on top of the 17-analyst consensus average and implies the 2026 adjusted EBITDA margin guide of 37-38% is delivered. The bull case of $85.56 matches SEB's current target and requires merger synergies to annualise into 2027 EPS, capex ratios to start declining, and ROIC ex-goodwill to move toward the mid-teens. The bear case of $50.24 would require organic growth to fall below 4% while capex stays elevated — not a remote scenario if the Q4 Planetary Health weakness persists.


Bottom line

The numbers confirm that Novonesis is a high-quality franchise: 37% adjusted EBITDA margins, 175% five-year cumulative cash conversion, single-digit organic growth with pricing, and a moat rooted in enzyme IP and fermentation manufacturing. They contradict the view that the Chr. Hansen merger has already paid for itself — adjusted ROIC including goodwill is still only 5.6%, and the $6.6bn goodwill block means any lasting underperformance would invite impairment risk. What to watch in 2026: whether Agriculture, Energy & Tech recovers above the 4% organic run-rate shown in Q4; whether capex peaks below the 14% of sales upper guide; and whether management delivers the promised 37-38% adjusted EBITDA margin even with the USD headwind that is only 72% hedged.