SYNTHOS RESEARCH

Ferrovial SE FER

Industrials · Engineering & Construction · Synthos Deep Dive · 2026-07-03

$67.72
Hold
Risk 6Growth 5Exponential 3Fair value $66 $48–$84

At a glance

VerdictHold — systematic Synthos tier
Price (2026-07-02)$67.72 · market cap ~$48.8B · reports in EUR
Synthos scores (0–10)Downside Risk 6 · Growth Quality 5 · Exponential Potential 3
Synthos fair value (base case)~$66−3% · full range $48 (bear) – $84 (bull)
Street consensus$71 — but this is a single-analyst FMP target; grades are 2 Hold, 0 Buy/Sell. Thin; treat as noise, not signal.
Valuation49× trailing EPS · ~64× FY26E · ~55× FY27E · ~39× FY30E · EV/S 5.2× · EV/EBITDA 25.9× — IFRS EPS understates concession cash (§6)
Exponential Potential3/10 · Low — ~5% forward revenue CAGR, decelerating, no accelerant; a mature concessionaire, not a multibagger
TechnicalsNeutral — $67.72, −9% off 52-wk high, straddling 50/200-DMA, RSI 52, +27% 12-mo (SPY +21%, QQQ +30%)
ConvictionLow — 0 net-bullish voices, 0 KB claims. No Synthos expert edge on this name
Position sizingIf owned at all, a small (~1–2%) satellite/diversifier — low-beta infra ballast, not a core conviction holding
Next catalyst2026-07-28 H1'26 results (Street rev ~€2.94B)
Single biggest riskYou'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 — Hold FER 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:

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.


Price & moving averages 12 months · 50 & 200-day averages · 52-week range

4251596877Jul '25Sep '25Nov '25Feb '26Apr '26Jul '2652w hi $7450-DMA 68Price 68200-DMA 6652w lo $51

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

4856637179Jul '25Sep '25Nov '25Feb '26Apr '26Jul '2620-day avg 68Price 68

The shaded band widens when the stock gets more volatile. Riding the upper edge = strong momentum (sometimes stretched); the lower edge = weak / potentially oversold.

RSI (14) momentum gauge · 0–100

705030Jul '25Sep '25Nov '25Feb '26Apr '26Jul '26RSI 47.5

Above 70 (red band) = overbought, below 30 (green band) = oversold. Currently 47.

MACD 12 / 26 / 9 · trend & momentum

0Jul '25Sep '25Nov '25Feb '26Apr '26Jul '26signal 0.2MACD 0.1

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

93106118131144Jul '25Sep '25Nov '25Feb '26Apr '26Jul '26FER 128XLI (sector) 124S&P 500 120

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.

Forward revenue & earnings actual → estimate · "FY" = fiscal year, "E" = estimate

0371014$8BFY23EPS $0$9BFY24EPS $1$9BFY25EPS $1$10BFY26EEPS $1$11BFY27EEPS $1$11BFY28EEPS $1$12BFY29EEPS $1$12BFY30EEPS $2

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 trailing
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:

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:

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):

Score0–10The read
Downside Risk (lower = safer)6 · Moderate-HighLow 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 Quality5 · AverageDurable, 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 Potential3 · LowA 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.

CaseKey assumptionsFair value
Bull407 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%)
BearRate-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:

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)

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)

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

10. Catalysts & what to watch

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

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.

This verdict is logged as a tracked Synthos call as of 2026-07-03 at $67.72.


Provenance & disclosures