When Ams Osram shareholders gather in Premstätten on 10 June, they will be asked to approve more than just routine governance. Two of the most consequential decisions on the agenda — the retirement of one expired capital instrument and the election of two supervisory board members — underscore how thoroughly the photonics group is rewriting its financial and corporate architecture.
The simpler but symbolically important item is the cancellation of a conditional capital increase worth up to €8.4 million, linked to roughly 844,000 new shares. The underlying authorization to issue convertible bonds expired, and the bonds themselves — placed in 2018 — were fully redeemed in March 2025. With no further use for the tool, the company is tidying up a potential dilution threat that no longer applies. The move is part of a broader cleanup: the audited accounts show a balance-sheet profit of exactly zero, meaning there will be no dividend proposal for the 2025 financial year.
Board overhaul amid strategic shift
The supervisory board mandates of Andreas Gerstenmayer and Arunjai Mittal terminate with the AGM, and both slots must be filled. At a company that is simultaneously selling off its non-optical sensor unit and doubling down on intelligent lighting and photonics, the election carries more weight than a routine succession. Shareholders must submit their depot confirmation by 5 June to vote.
The strategic backdrop is the €570 million sale of the non-optical sensor business to Infineon, expected to close in the second quarter of 2026. The deal, which includes roughly 230 employees from R&D and management but no production sites, comes with a multi-year supply agreement between the two groups. Taken together with other ongoing divestitures, Ams Osram anticipates total proceeds of around €670 million — a figure that will help meet a self-imposed target: halving annual financing costs from as much as €300 million to under €150 million by 2028.
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Operating metrics underpin the narrative
First-quarter numbers for 2026 provide tangible support for the restructuring story. Revenue reached €796 million, and the adjusted EBITDA margin of 16.5 percent landed at the top end of management’s guidance. The remaining core semiconductor portfolio — now exclusively optical — grew 9 percent on a like-for-like basis. Liquidity stood at €1.317 billion at the end of March, while net debt was €1.071 billion.
Free cash flow for the full year is forecast above €300 million, though management acknowledges that figure depends heavily on disposal proceeds. The group expects to generate positive operating cash flow from 2027 onward.
Stock retreats after searing rally
The shares, which have more than doubled since the start of the year, have cooled recently. After hitting a 52-week high of €26.10 in late May, the stock slid 13 percent over the past week and now trades at around €21.50 — still 18 percent below that peak. The rally reflected growing confidence in the transformation strategy, but the AGM itself is unlikely to provide a fresh catalyst; operational momentum will have to come from elsewhere.
That momentum is being built in optical semiconductors for automotive, augmented reality, biosensing, robotics, and optical interconnects for AI data centres. In May 2026, Ams Osram signed a development agreement with a leading AI photonics customer — a first concrete step into that last market. The AGM on 10 June will be the first formal shareholder forum since the accelerated restructuring began, and with the Infineon closing on the horizon, the pieces are falling into place for a leaner, more focused company.
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