Low — 0 net-bullish voices, 0 KB claims. No Synthos expert edge on this name
Position sizing
If owned at all, a small (~1–2%) satellite/diversifier — low-beta infra ballast, not a core conviction holding
Next catalyst
2026-07-28 H1'26 results (Street rev ~€2.94B)
Single biggest risk
You're paying a ~49× earnings multiple on a business whose reported net income (€888M FY25) is a fraction of its sum-of-parts asset value — a NAV-vs-price gap that can close the wrong way
One-line thesis. Ferrovial is a high-quality, low-beta owner of irreplaceable transport-concession assets (the 407 ETR toll road, Heathrow/other airports, US managed lanes) whose IFRS earnings badly understate its economic cash generation — but with no expert coverage in our KB, an optically extreme earnings multiple, and only mid-single-digit forward revenue growth, the honest call is Watch until either the price backs off or the concession NAV story is underwritten properly.
◆ Synthos call — HoldFER is a solid business largely reflected at ~$66 — fine to keep, no reason to chase; it gets interesting again below ~$56.
Downside Risk (lower = safer)
6/10 · High
Optically rich (49× TTM EPS) & net-debt/EBITDA 3.4×, but low beta 0.80 and small drawdown; IFRS EPS understates concession NAV.
Growth Quality
5/10 · Moderate
~5% forward revenue CAGR, low-single-digit reported ROIC, but a durable toll-road/airport concession moat.
Exponential Potential
3/10 · Low
Mature infrastructure concessionaire — decelerating, ~$49B cap, no accelerant; income compounder, not an exponential.
What do the 5 tiers mean? (Core · Tactical · Watch · Hold · Avoid)
Buy — CoreOwn it as a foundation — start or add now, size it for years, let dips be gifts.
Buy — TacticalGood price + confirmed trend + a defined exit — buy the setup, not a marriage.
WatchWe want the business, just not at this price/setup — act only when the listed trigger hits.
HoldFine to keep if you own it — no reason to buy more; new money does better elsewhere.
AvoidDon't own it — the problem is the business or the expectations, so a cheaper price won't fix it.
In plain English
Ferrovial builds and, more importantly, owns pieces of big pay-to-use infrastructure: a major Canadian toll highway (the 407 near Toronto), airports (including a stake in London Heathrow), and express toll lanes on US highways. When you pay a toll or an airport fee, a slice flows to Ferrovial for decades. Those are excellent, hard-to-replace assets.
The catch: on the accounting the market usually looks at, the stock looks very expensive — you're paying roughly $49 for every $1 of last year's reported profit. That number is misleading (the accounting hides a lot of the toll-road cash), but it's still a stretch, and no expert in our research network covers this name, so we have no edge here. Our verdict is Watch — a fine business to keep an eye on, but not one to chase at today's price without a clear reason.
Here's what our three scores mean in everyday terms:
Downside Risk 6/10 (a bit above middle). The stock is steady and doesn't swing much, but it carries a fair amount of debt and the price already assumes a lot goes right.
Growth Quality 5/10 (average). Solid, durable assets, but they grow slowly — think low-single-digit percent a year.
Exponential Potential 3/10 (low). This is a "collect the tolls for decades" business, not a rocket ship. Don't expect it to double quickly.
The one big worry: you may be overpaying versus what the reported earnings can justify, and if the market ever decides to value it on those earnings, the price could fall.
Solid = price · dashed = 50-day average · dotted = 200-day average · amber = 52-week high/low. Price above both averages is an uptrend.
Bollinger Bands 20-day average ± 2 standard deviations
The shaded band widens when the stock gets more volatile. Riding the upper edge = strong momentum (sometimes stretched); the lower edge = weak / potentially oversold.
Blue crossing above amber (bars flip green) = momentum turning up; below (bars red) = turning down. Bar height = the size of that gap.
Relative performance vs S&P 500 & its sector (XLI (sector)), set to 100 a year ago
Solid = FER · dashed = S&P 500 · dotted = XLI (sector). A rising line means it is beating that benchmark — the sector line shows whether it is a leader or laggard within its own group.
Darker bars = actual results, brighter = analyst estimates. Taller bars to the right = expected growth.
Key stats an RIA wants
Price$67.72
Market cap$49B
P/E trailing3×
P/E FY26E / FY27E69× / 58×
EV / Sales5.2×
EV / EBITDA25.9×
Gross margin10.0%
Net margin9.2%
Dividend yield2.44%
Beta0.796
52-wk range$51 – $74
RSI(14)52
50 / 200-DMA$68 / $66
12-mo return+27% (SPY +21%)
Street target$71 ($71–$71)
Analyst grades0 Buy · 2 Hold · 0 Sell
FMP ratingC-
Next earnings2026-08-05
What the experts actually said 0 traceable claims on FER · showing the highest-conviction voices
Every claim reconciles to a real claim_id in the Synthos knowledge base — this is the evidence the verdict is built on, not vibes. Management (the company itself) is shown but half-weighted; one cautionary voice is included on purpose.
1. What it is
Ferrovial SE (Nasdaq: FER; also lists in Amsterdam and Madrid) is a global infrastructure group, headquartered in Amsterdam, that manages the full lifecycle — design, build, finance, operate, maintain — of transport infrastructure and urban services. It runs through four divisions:
Toll Roads — the crown jewel. Ferrovial owns a large equity stake in the 407 ETR (a barrier-free electronic toll highway in the Greater Toronto Area) plus US managed-lane concessions (e.g. Texas/Virginia express lanes). These are long-dated, inflation-linked, high-margin cash annuities.
Airports — stakes in London Heathrow (partially sold down in recent years) and other airport assets; a new-build US airport-terminal push (JFK Terminal 1).
Construction — the legacy engineering & construction arm (Budimex in Poland, US/UK civil works). Lower-margin, more cyclical, but it feeds the concession pipeline.
Energy Infrastructure & Mobility — power-transmission lines and renewables (largely in the Americas), plus mobility/waste and Chilean mining services. The smallest, newest leg.
Fiscal year ends December 31; the company reports in EUR while the Nasdaq line trades in USD — a currency mismatch that inflates the optical P/E when translated (§6). CEO: Ignacio Madridejos Fernández. ~25,300 employees. Beta 0.80.
Revenue mix (from filings). FER's revenue base is ~€9.6B (FY25), but note that its most valuable assets — the 407 ETR and airports — are equity-accounted (their profit shows up below the revenue line as share-of-associates), so revenue understates where the value is. FMP's product segmentation is empty; the only segmentation provided is a partial geographic split of one division:
Geographic (FY25, partial / EUR): Other countries €848M · Spain €307M · US €214M · Canada €125M · Poland €109M. This clearly does not sum to €9.6B — it's a single-division cut, so read it as directional only. The economically important geographies are Canada (407 ETR), the US (managed lanes, new airport terminals), the UK (Heathrow), and Poland (Budimex construction).
The strategic story management keeps pressing: rotate capital out of construction/mature stakes and into high-return US managed lanes, new US airport terminals, and energy transmission — using the 407's dividend stream as the funding engine.
2. The expert thesis — why the panel is bullish (traceable)
There is none to report.FER.json shows total_claims: 0, net_bullish_voices: 0, and an empty top array. No voice in the Synthos knowledge base covers Ferrovial — bullish, bearish, or neutral.
This matters, and we say it plainly: the House Standard is that honesty is the product, and we will not manufacture conviction we do not have. Everything below this section is fundamentals- and quant-driven — computed from the FMP financials, estimates, and price/technical block — with zero borrowed expert conviction. Where our conviction-track names (e.g. LLY) carry a wall of reconciled claim_ids, FER carries none, and its conviction_rating is Low by construction. Absence of coverage is not a negative signal (Ferrovial is simply outside our experts' circle of focus) — but it does mean we have no edge here beyond the numbers, which is a core input to the Watch verdict.
3. Synthos scores & the Bull / Base / Bear cases
The one-glance judgment — three scores, 0–10, each anchored to real metrics (not probabilities we can't honestly calibrate):
Score
0–10
The read
Downside Risk(lower = safer)
6 · Moderate-High
Low beta (0.80) and a shallow drawdown (−9% off highs) cut risk, but net-debt/EBITDA 3.4× is meaningful leverage and the stock trades at 49× trailing / ~64× FY26E reported EPS — little margin if the NAV-vs-earnings gap ever closes on the earnings side.
Growth Quality
5 · Average
Durable, inflation-linked concession moat and improving margins, but only ~5% forward revenue CAGR, low reported ROIC (ROIC 4.4%, ROE 15% flattered by leverage), and FY24's headline earnings were one-off asset-sale gains, not operating growth.
Exponential Potential
3 · Low
A mature, decelerating infrastructure concessionaire at a ~$49B cap with no accelerant. This is a decades-long toll-annuity compounder, not a multibagger. A small, accelerating asset-light name would score 8–9; FER is the opposite profile.
The three cases (our own scenario model — assumptions shown; each target is a ~12–18-month fair value). We deliberately do not attach probabilities: the base case is by definition the expected path, so a weighted blend would just restate it with false precision. Instead the cases bound the range, and the scores above summarize them. Because IFRS EPS is a poor yardstick here, we anchor the cases on EV/EBITDA (25.9× TTM) and the concession NAV narrative, cross-checked against EPS.
Case
Key assumptions
Fair value
Bull
407 ETR traffic/tariffs compound, Heathrow re-rates, US managed lanes & JFK T1 ramp; market pays up for scarce inflation-linked infra. EBITDA compounds high-single-digits and the multiple holds ~27–28× EV/EBITDA on a NAV re-rate.
~$84 (+24%)
Base(our anchor)
Estimates roughly hit — ~5% revenue CAGR, EBITDA drifting toward the FY27E ~€4.1B consensus band; EV/EBITDA holds ~25×, roughly today's level. Fairly valued for a quality-but-slow concessionaire.
~$66 (−3%)
Bear
Rate-driven de-rating of long-duration infra, a toll/airport traffic disappointment, or the market re-anchors on the thin ~49× reported EPS; EV/EBITDA compresses to ~19×.
~$48 (−29%)
Synthos fair value = the base case, ~$66 (−3%), with the full $48–$84 span as the honest range. The single-analyst Street target of $71 is too thin to lean on (one contributor, 2 Hold grades), so we show it only as context. Our base sits essentially at the current price — which is exactly why the verdict is Watch: no compelling margin of safety, no expert edge, no catalyst we can underwrite today. This is a tracked call — the Forecaster Scorecard grades it once it matures.
4. Exponential Potential
Synthos separates compounders (durable high returns on capital) from exponentials (accelerating, multi-baggers-from-here). FER is neither an exponential nor even a fast compounder — it's a slow, durable income concessionaire:
Forward growth: revenue CAGR FY25→FY30E ~4.8% (€9.63B → €12.2B consensus avg). EBITDA is projected to rise faster (toward ~€4.7B FY30E consensus) as construction dilutes down and concessions dominate the mix — but this is high-single-digit at best, not exponential.
Acceleration (the 2nd derivative) is roughly flat-to-slightly-negative: revenue +5.2% (FY24) → +5.3% (FY25 actual €9.63B) → +4.1% (FY26E) → +5.1% (FY27E) → ~5.6% (FY28E). No inflection. The 2030s "next leg" (US lanes, JFK, energy transmission) is real but slow-building.
Room to run: the addressable market (global toll roads, airport concessions, power transmission) is enormous, but Ferrovial's rate of capture is gated by the pace of new concession awards and its own balance sheet (net-debt/EBITDA 3.4×). At ~$49B the law of large numbers is not the binding constraint — the slow, capital-intensive, permit-gated nature of the assets is.
Reinvestment runway: intact but modest — FCF ~€1.7B FY25 funds a dividend, buybacks (€501M repurchased FY25), and equity into new concessions. Returns on that capital are respectable for infra (concession-level, not the low blended IFRS ROIC), but nothing here compounds at 20%+.
Exponential Potential: Low (3/10). Own FER — if at all — for low-beta, inflation-linked infrastructure income and ballast, not for a fast multibagger. This is the honest opposite of a Degen-tier holding.
5. Financials (real numbers — FMP annual/quarterly, reported in EUR)
⚠️ Read FY24's headline with care: FMP shows FY24 net income of €3,239M and EPS €4.36, but that was inflated by large one-off gains (asset disposals — Heathrow sell-down and similar; note the €2.3B negative "otherNonCashItems" reversing them in cash flow, and FY24 EBITDA of €4.5B vs a normalized ~€2.0B). FY25's €888M net income / €1.20 EPS and €1,998M EBITDA are the clean, comparable picture. Any "earnings fell 72%" read off the headline is an artifact of the FY24 one-offs, not operating deterioration.
Margins (FY25, TTM): gross margin is not meaningful for this mixed model; EBITDA margin ~20% TTM (up from mid-teens historically as concessions grow in the mix), net margin ~9.2% TTM. Directionally improving as construction dilutes down.
Cash flow (the truer tell than EPS): FY25 operating CF €1.93B, capex only −€187M, FCF ~€1.74B — a ~3.3% FCF yield on market cap and, crucially, this excludes the dividends Ferrovial receives from its equity-accounted 407 ETR and airport stakes, which flow through investing/associate lines. Cash generation is materially better than IFRS net income suggests — this is the whole valuation debate in one line.
Balance sheet: total debt €10.7B, cash €4.24B, net debt €6.49B, net-debt/EBITDA 3.4×. That looks high, but a large chunk of concession debt is non-recourse, ring-fenced at the asset level (typical for infra) — still, at the corporate level it's real leverage that argues for caution. Current ratio 1.13×, interest coverage ~2.7×.
6. Valuation — priced in or room?
On reported earnings, FER looks extremely expensive — and honesty requires we not wave that away. TTM P/E 48.6×; translating EUR EPS to the USD price, forward P/E is roughly ~64× FY26E → ~55× FY27E → ~39× FY30E. Those are venture-growth multiples on a ~5%-growth infrastructure company, and FMP's own letter rating is C- (overall score 1/5), flagging exactly this: cheap on nothing, expensive on P/E, P/B (7.3×), ROA and ROE-vs-quality screens.
But the earnings yardstick is genuinely misleading here, for two structural reasons:
1. Equity-accounting understates the crown jewels. The 407 ETR and airport stakes contribute cash dividends and NAV, but only a modest share-of-associates line hits IFRS net income. Sell-side and the company value FER on sum-of-parts NAV / DCF of concession cash flows, on which it screens far less extreme.
2. EV/EBITDA (25.9×) and EV/Sales (5.2×) are richer than an industrial but normal for a premium, inflation-linked concession portfolio — this is the multiple the market actually pays.
Our honest synthesis: FER is not cheap on any lens, but it is not the 49×-earnings bubble the headline P/E implies either — the truth sits in the middle, on EV/EBITDA and NAV. We anchor our base case on ~25× EV/EBITDA (roughly today's level), which puts fair value at about the current price (~$66) — hence fairly valued, not a bargain. Street target (context): a single FMP contributor at $70.93 with a Hold consensus — too thin to anchor on. Verdict lens: a quality asset at a full price with no expert edge and no margin of safety = Watch, not Buy.
7. Technicals (from the FMP tech block)
Trend:neutral. $67.72 sits essentially on top of both moving averages — 50-DMA $68.26 (just above price) and 200-DMA $66.30 (just below) — i.e. no decisive trend, price is mid-range. MACD +0.13 (marginally positive).
Location:−9.0% off the 52-week high ($74.38) and +32.5% off the 52-week low ($51.10) — mid-range, with a modest max drawdown of ~9% (low-volatility behavior consistent with beta 0.80).
Momentum: RSI(14) 51.7 — dead neutral, neither overbought nor oversold. No entry-timing edge either way.
Relative strength: FER +26.9% 12-mo vs SPY +20.6% (beat the market) but vs QQQ +30.3% (lagged the Nasdaq-100 it belongs to). Over 3 months it lagged badly: +1.0% vs SPY +13.7% and QQQ +22.0%. So: a market-beater on a 1-year view, but a recent laggard with no momentum tailwind.
Read: technicals are neutral and consistent with the fundamental call — a steady, low-beta name with no trend, no oversold entry gift, and recent relative weakness. No technical reason to rush; nothing broken either.
8. Moat & competitive position
Ferrovial's moat is asset-based and durable: it owns equity in irreplaceable, long-dated, often monopolistic concessions. The 407 ETR is a barrier-free toll highway with strong pricing power and a concession running to 2098; premium airports and US managed lanes are similarly scarce, permit-gated, and inflation-linked. You cannot build a competing highway next door — the moat is the asset itself plus the multi-decade contract. That is a genuine, wide moat for the concession assets. The weaker leg is Construction, which is competitive, cyclical, and low-margin — but management uses it deliberately as an origination funnel for future concessions rather than as a profit center.
Peer set (FMP; market cap). FMP groups FER with US industrials/distribution rather than pure infra peers, which is imperfect: PACCAR $62.9B, W.W. Grainger $63.4B, Delta Air Lines $60.9B, Fastenal $55.8B, AMETEK $53.8B, Rockwell Automation $52.5B, Ferguson $44.7B, Waste Connections $42.9B, Paychex $38.1B, Symbotic $4.9B. The truer comparables are other listed concessionaires (Vinci, Atlantia/Mundys, Transurban, Aena) — none in this FMP peer list. Against that real peer group, FER's mix of a trophy toll road plus airports plus a US growth pipeline is well-regarded; against the FMP industrials list, its optical multiples look stretched.
9. Management, capital allocation & guidance
Capital allocation: disciplined and shareholder-friendly for an infra name — FY25 saw €501M of buybacks and €156M of dividends (dividend yield ~1.8%, payout ~13% of earnings, comfortably covered by FCF), alongside €478M of acquisitions/concession investment. The strategy is a capital-rotation flywheel: monetize mature stakes (the Heathrow sell-down), redeploy into higher-return US managed lanes, JFK Terminal 1, and energy transmission. Net-debt/EBITDA at 3.4× is on the higher side but much of it is non-recourse concession debt.
Insider activity: the FMP insider feed is empty for FER — no signal to read (neither reassuring nor alarming; simply absent).
Guidance: management guides at the divisional/concession level (traffic, tariffs, project milestones) rather than to a single EPS number. Gap flagged: we have no distilled management claims in the KB for FER, so we are relying entirely on the FMP financials and estimates here; a future version can ingest the earnings-release guidance and the sum-of-parts NAV bridge that the valuation debate actually turns on.
10. Catalysts & what to watch
Next earnings: 2026-07-28 (H1'26 results; Street revenue est ~€2.94B; note FMP's quarterly EPS estimate is negative, reflecting seasonal/accounting timing rather than distress). Watch 407 ETR traffic and tariff growth and airport passenger volumes above all.
407 ETR dividends & valuation — the single most important value driver; any change to the distribution or a partial monetization would move NAV materially.
US growth pipeline — managed-lane traffic ramps (Texas/Virginia) and JFK Terminal 1 progress; these are the "next leg."
Heathrow / airports — any further stake sale (crystallizing NAV) or a re-rating of the retained stake.
Rates — long-duration infra is rate-sensitive; falling rates help the concession DCF, rising rates hurt.
Thesis tripwires (what would change the call): a sustained toll/airport traffic deterioration; net-debt/EBITDA climbing past ~4×; a dividend cut at the 407; or — on the upside toward a Buy — a NAV-crystallizing asset sale plus a price pullback that opens a real margin of safety, or the arrival of credible expert coverage in our KB.
11. Key risks
Valuation / earnings-yardstick risk (structural): you pay ~49× trailing / ~64× forward reported EPS. If the market ever re-anchors on IFRS earnings instead of NAV, the de-rating is severe. This is the single biggest risk.
Leverage: net-debt/EBITDA 3.4×; even though much is non-recourse, a rate shock or a traffic downturn pressures the concession-level coverage.
Concession & regulatory: tolls, airport charges, and managed lanes are politically and contractually sensitive — tariff caps, re-negotiations, or concession-end terms can impair value.
Cyclicality of Construction & traffic: the C&E arm is cyclical; toll/airport volumes are economically sensitive (COVID drove a €424M FY20 loss — a real reminder).
FX & reporting mismatch: reports in EUR, trades in USD — translation swings the optical multiple and adds currency risk for a USD investor.
No expert edge: we hold zero KB conviction on this name — we are underwriting purely on public financials, which is itself a reason for caution and the Watch label.
12. Verdict, position sizing & monitoring
Watch. Ferrovial owns genuinely excellent, scarce, inflation-linked infrastructure assets (the 407 ETR above all), generates far more cash than its IFRS earnings suggest, and behaves like the low-beta ballast it is. But three things keep it off the Buy list today: (1) no expert coverage in our KB — zero conviction edge; (2) an optically extreme, and even on EV/EBITDA a full, valuation with no margin of safety — our base fair value sits ~3% below the current price; and (3) only mid-single-digit forward growth with no accelerant. Nothing here is broken — it simply isn't compelling at $67.72.
Sizing: if held at all, a small ~1–2% satellite/diversifier — infrastructure income and low-beta ballast, explicitly not a core conviction position.
Monitoring: re-underwrite on the tripwires in §10 — a NAV-crystallizing catalyst plus a price pullback, or the arrival of real expert coverage, is what would move this from Watch to Buy — Tactical. Formal re-score each results print.
Single biggest risk: paying ~49× reported earnings on a business whose value lives in NAV — a gap that can close the wrong way.
This verdict is logged as a tracked Synthos call as of 2026-07-03 at $67.72.
Provenance & disclosures
Traceability:0 KB claims, breadth 0, net conviction 0 — Ferrovial has no expert coverage in the Synthos knowledge base. This note is entirely fundamentals- and quant-driven; no conviction is borrowed or fabricated (claim-ID reconciliation makes fabrication structurally impossible — there simply are no claims to cite).
Data as-of: fundamentals 2026-03-31 (Q1'26) · estimates & prices 2026-07-02/03 · reported in EUR, priced in USD. Forward figures are analyst consensus (FMP), labeled as estimates; forward P/E uses an approximate EUR→USD translation and is indicative only.
Accounting caveat: FY2024 headline net income/EPS were inflated by one-off asset-disposal gains; FY2025 (€888M / €1.20) is the clean comparable. IFRS net income understates the equity-accounted 407 ETR and airport cash flows — valuation is better read on EV/EBITDA and sum-of-parts NAV.
Street data caveat: the $70.93 target is a single-analyst FMP figure with a 2-Hold consensus — shown as context, not relied upon.
Not investment advice. Independent research, educational and informational only, never personalized. Hypothetical/forward figures are labeled; the only performance numbers Synthos will headline are the live, real-money Flagship's.
Version: 2026-07-03. Prior versions available via the deep-dive version dropdown ("based on the info at the time").