BayWa Navigates a Maze of Legal Probes, Stalled Asset Sales, and Bank Ultimatums
13.05.2026 - 03:00:53 | boerse-global.de
The noose is tightening around BayWa from several directions at once. The Munich-based agricultural trader is fighting to keep its restructuring on track while fending off a barrage of legal challenges, watching a planned €1.7 billion energy division sale collapse, and racing to secure bank approval that could make or break the entire turnaround. Each front threatens to destabilise the others, leaving little room for error.
The stock has been a barometer of the deepening distrust. It closed at €13.05 on Tuesday, down 22.09% since the start of the year and 29.65% over the past twelve months. Trading well below its 200-day moving average, the equity reflects a market that sees more downside risk than recovery potential.
Legal Storm Brewing on Multiple Fronts
Investor anger is crystallising into formal action. The Tübingen law firm TILP is preparing damages claims for shareholders who bought BayWa shares between January 2022 and January 2026. The trigger is a BaFin order that censured the company’s 2023 management report for omitting critical details about a billion-euro loan and failing to disclose risks tied to a €500 million bond. TILP argues this amounts to deception on price-sensitive facts, which could lead to claims against both the company and former board members. All parties benefit from the presumption of innocence.
Criminal investigators are also circling. The Munich I public prosecutor’s office is probing former chief executives Klaus Josef Lutz and Marcus Pöllinger on suspicion of breach of trust and false presentation in the 2023 annual accounts. Raids were conducted in January.
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The auditor PwC is under the microscope too. It issued an unqualified audit opinion for 2023 without flagging existential risks. The audit supervisory body Apas has now launched professional oversight proceedings. BayWa is already moving on: it will put the audit mandate out to tender from 2026, with PwC handling its last assignment for the 2025 financial year. That audit itself will be delayed until the fourth quarter of 2026 because the company must revalue its renewable energy subsidiary BayWa r.e.
Bank Deal Holds the Key
The legal noise is deafening, but the real deadline is financial. BayWa needs to secure around €4 billion in debt relief by 2028. So far it has locked in only €1.3 billion. The linchpin is a standstill agreement with DZ Bank and HVB that must be extended until autumn 2026. Without that green light, the restructuring plan finalised under the StaRUG framework in May 2025 loses its legal foundation. The stakes are high enough that some Bavarian cooperative banks have already written down 60% of a promissory note loan in their 2024 accounts. A total loss is not ruled out.
The original plan to sell a majority stake in the energy division for up to €1.7 billion fell apart after US subsidies for renewables were scrapped, crushing valuations. That forced management to turn to smaller asset sales.
Selling Apples Won’t Fill the Hole
Goldman Sachs has been tasked since March with finding a buyer for New Zealand-based fruit subsidiary T&G Global, the owner of the Envy and Jazz apple brands sold in more than 60 countries. The division is profitable and attractive to strategic buyers, but the process is being slowed by Hong Kong minority shareholder Joy Wing Mau Group. Analysts expect a price of around €300 million — a fraction of the multi-billion-euro debt mountain back in Munich.
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T&G’s sale proceeds, if they materialise, will barely dent the balance sheet. The board has already scrapped the 2026 earnings forecast and slashed its 2027 EBITDA target to roughly €140 million. The company is shrinking its revenue base significantly and cutting around 1,300 jobs.
The Clock Is Ticking
Two key milestones loom. In May, first-quarter results will provide an early read on cost-cutting progress. More critically, the fourth quarter of 2026 will bring the audited annual report and the hoped-for bank agreement. Until the standstill extension is signed, every other piece of the jigsaw — the asset sales, the legal defence, the operational overhaul — remains provisional. BayWa is running out of time and options simultaneously.
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