Shares of Mondi Plc declined on the news that BofA Securities lowered its recommendation on the paper and packaging company from "buy" to "neutral." The bank cited a constrained upside to earnings and a heightened probability that European containerboard volumes will weaken in the second half of the year, creating downside risk for sector profitability.
BofA reduced its price target on Mondi’s U.K.-listed shares to 780 pence from 980 pence. The revised target is based on a valuation of 8 times the broker’s 2026 EBITDA estimate, placing it at the high end of the stock’s 10-year trading range of 6.5 to 8 times. The brokerage applied the same directional cuts to shares listed elsewhere, lowering the U.S. price objective to $21 from $26 and the South African target to 170 rand from 219 rand.
Alongside the rating change, BofA adjusted its internal scorecards. Mondi’s rating moved to B-2-8 from B-1-7, and the income rating was shifted to 8 - indicating a dividend assessment of "same/lower" - from 7, previously interpreted as "same/higher."
Why BofA is cautious
Bank analysts pointed to several factors that underpin their more cautious stance. While containerboard producers reported resilient shipment volumes in March and April and recent price increases have generally held, BofA warned this strength could be driven by inventory stocking rather than an organic improvement in demand. The analysts called attention to a parallel with the 2022 inventory cycle, when pre-stocking reversed and produced a marked drop in purchase volumes and prices.
BofA quantified recent cost and price moves. Since before the Iran war, the brokerage estimates testliner input costs have climbed by roughly 50 per tonne and kraftliner by about 40 per tonne. Selling prices, as of June, are estimated to be 80 to 100 per tonne higher for both grades. The analysts noted this largely reflects cost pass-through rather than expansion of margins, and warned that prices and margins "could give way again in the summer."
Macro indicators cited in the research note added to the caution. The Eurozone composite PMI fell to 48.5 in May, signaling contraction, and German factory orders declined 3.8% month-on-month in April, data points the bank highlighted when assessing demand outlook.
Market balance and capacity outlook
BofA offered an estimate of the European containerboard market balance. The bank believes the market is programmed to operate at about 90% of capacity, while observed utilization sits below 85%. After factoring in an estimated 1 million tonnes of potential plant closures over the coming year, this yields an implied net oversupply in excess of 2 million tonnes - around 4% of capacity - according to BofA's calculations.
In response to these dynamics, the brokerage trimmed its Mondi EBITDA forecasts for 2026 and 2027 by 5% to 6%. Its 2026 EBITDA estimate stands at C881 million versus a Visible Alpha consensus of C885 million, while the 2027 estimate of C1.12 billion is about 3% above consensus of C1.09 billion.
BofA also flagged balance sheet leverage. Mondi’s net debt to EBITDA ratio is reported at roughly 3 times, up from a historical level below 2.0 times. On valuation, the stock trades near 6.4 times BofA's 2027 EBITDA projection, compared with an approximate through-the-cycle multiple of 7.5 times.
Sector positioning
While cutting Mondi, BofA left its recommendation on a peer unchanged. The bank maintained a "buy" on Smurfit Westrock and kept a price objective of $57, or 4,182 pence, citing that the rival's integration progress, hedging approach, and box-pricing strategy should prove more resilient should a downturn arrive.
Investors considering exposure to the paper and packaging space will weigh the balancing act BofA describes: near-term volume resilience and price pass-through on one hand, and the risk that inventory digestion and softer industrial demand could pressure volumes, prices, and margins on the other.