Henkel delivered annual 2025 revenue totaling €20.5 billion, marginally below the €20.6 billion target that Wall Street analysts had anticipated. The company’s organic sales expansion clocked in at 0.9% for the full year, also trailing the projected 1.1% growth rate.
The fourth quarter performance added to investor concerns. With organic growth registering at 2.3% during the final three months, results fell short of market expectations hovering around 3%.
The disappointing Q4 outcome stemmed primarily from weakness in Henkel’s Adhesive Technologies segment, which posted subpar results. Meanwhile, the Consumer Brands division — featuring household names such as Persil and Schwarzkopf — exceeded expectations, partially counterbalancing the adhesives shortfall.
Henkel AG & Co. KGaA, HEN.DE
The adjusted return on sales metric reached 14.8% for the complete fiscal year, improving from the prior year’s 14.3%. Adjusted earnings per preferred share climbed 4.7% on a constant currency basis, settling at €5.33.
The company also announced a dividend increase of 1.5%, bringing the payout to €2.07 per preferred share.
Looking ahead to 2026, Henkel projects organic sales growth in the 1% to 3% range. The middle of this guidance band sits beneath the 2.1% growth rate that analysts anticipated, based on data from Vara Research.
The Consumer Brands segment is expected to achieve organic growth between 0.5% and 2.5%, compared to analyst consensus around 2.1%. For Adhesive Technologies, the company forecasts 1% to 3% expansion, while analysts had modeled approximately 2.8% growth.
Management expects the adjusted operating profit margin to fall within 14.5% to 16.0%. This compares to analyst forecasts of 15.2%. Earnings per share are anticipated to advance in the low- to high-single-digit percentage territory.
RBC Capital Markets characterized the guidance figures as “sensible,” while noting that the underwhelming Q4 results created a headwind.
Chief Executive Carsten Knobel highlighted a more challenging operating environment for the coming year. He observed that 2025 already faced pressure from geopolitical turbulence and subdued consumer confidence.
Management acknowledged these challenges would persist into 2026, though the company refrained from adjusting its official outlook based on these factors.
Henkel’s shares retreated 4.19% on the reporting day, as investors digested both the fourth quarter shortfall and forward guidance that aligned with or fell below analyst expectations.
The modest 1.5% dividend boost provided a silver lining, particularly for shareholders prioritizing income generation.
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