Web Research
What the Internet Knows About Getlink
Figures converted from EUR at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates for the rate table. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.
The Bottom Line from the Web
Two strategic shareholders — Eiffage and Mundys — have ramped their combined stake to roughly 54% of capital and 60%+ of voting rights in the eight weeks before this report, each parking just below the 30% French mandatory-offer threshold. The filings frame this as routine; the press treats it as a creeping-control auction over a concession that runs to 2086. At the same time, FY26 EBITDA guidance of $943–989M sits ~3–6% below Street consensus ($1,001M), even as April truck volumes fell 2% and passenger-vehicle volumes fell 10% YoY — softness the filings do not lead with.
The Eiffage + Mundys stake-build is the single most important development not visible in audited financial filings. AMF has not declared concert party, but the timing, voting structure, and Mundys' April 2026 UK NSI Act clearance to lift to 25% capital / 29.9% votes effectively narrow free float to ~46%.
What Matters Most
1. The Eiffage + Mundys stake war
Eiffage (Dervaux Participations) lifted its position to 29.40% of capital / 29.50% of voting rights in late March 2026 via a block purchase of 7.1% at $20.35/share — a ~14% premium. Days later, Mundys (controlled by Edizione with Blackstone as #2) received UK NSI Act clearance to raise its holding to 25% capital / 29.9% voting rights, formally announced 24 April 2026. Both sit just under the 30% threshold that triggers a mandatory public tender in France. Press coverage in Option Finance (31 Mar 2026) and Challenges (11 Apr 2026) treats this as a battle for control. Source: eiffage.com, mundys.com, optionfinance.fr. Evidence: strong.
Mundys' parent Atlantia carries reputational baggage from the 2018 Genoa Morandi Bridge collapse. Eiffage's primary motive is concession-replacement: its APRR/AREA motorway concessions expire 2035-36 and account for ~65% of group operating profit. The bloc is structural, not speculative.
2. Consensus is too high on FY26 EBITDA
Management reaffirmed FY26 EBITDA guidance of $943–989M (midpoint $966M) at the Q1 release on 23 April 2026. Jefferies and others note consensus sits closer to $1,001M — meaning Street estimates need to come down 3–6%. The 2030 $1.18B EBITDA target announced at Investor Day (23 March 2026) frames the medium-term ramp, but year-one of that path is below where models sat. Source: press.getlinkgroup.com, investing.com. Evidence: strong.
3. April traffic softness undermines the resilience story
April 2026 LeShuttle data: truck volumes -2% YoY, passenger vehicles -10% YoY; YTD passenger -4%. Q1 truck market share fell to 35.8% vs 36.4% prior. Stock fell 2.18% on the print. The filings frame Q1 +15% revenue as broad strength; the volume read says otherwise. Source: press.getlinkgroup.com 7 May 2026 release; ideal-investisseur.fr. Evidence: strong.
4. UK Business Rates — material unresolved liability
The UK Valuation Office Agency proposed a ~200% increase in business rates on the UK Tunnel terminal in November 2025. Getlink booked a £26M (~$33M) charge in 2025 with a potential additional £15M (~$19M) in 2026, calling the assessment "unjustified and confiscatory" and signalling litigation under the 1986 concession. Filings disclose the dispute but do not flag the cash quantum as a thesis-relevant catalyst. Source: marketscreener.com. Evidence: strong.
£26M + potential £15M ≈ ~£41M (~$52M) annual rates uplift versus FY25 EBITDA of $1,009M. If unchallenged, this represents ~5% of EBITDA — well above what the filings narrative implies.
5. ElecLink suspensions are recurring; FY25 EBITDA is propped by a one-off
ElecLink was suspended 25 Sep 2024 → 5 Feb 2025 and again 19 May → 2 Jun 2025 due to cable-foundation defects outside the tunnel on the French side. Getlink booked a $65M insurance settlement (vs $18M initial accrual) in FY25 "Other income"; ex-settlement EBITDA was $966M, still above the $917–975M guide midpoint but no longer a clean beat. Q1 2026 ElecLink revenue +112% to $80M is on a depressed base (FY25 ElecLink $264M vs 2023 $617M). Source: businesswire.com, getlinkgroup.com. Evidence: strong.
6. EES went live; throughput friction is bidirectional
The EU Entry/Exit System launched 12 October 2025 and was declared fully operational 10 April 2026. Management frames smart-border infrastructure as a moat (60% of LeShuttle Freight customers use Getlink's Border Pass), but external reporting — Guardian, Trans.INFO, EC — indicates uneven throughput at UK-France crossings during the rollout. The Tunnel is not insulated from queue spillover risk. Source: home-affairs.ec.europa.eu. Evidence: strong.
7. French Competition Authority cleared DFDS/P&O capacity-sharing
On 5 December 2025, the FCA dismissed Eurotunnel's 2021 complaint and cleared the DFDS/P&O Dover-Calais freight capacity-sharing agreement. This structurally legitimises truck market-share migration that has eroded Tunnel freight share from 36.3% (Q4 2024) to 35.5% (FY25). DFDS subsequently announced its exit from the Dover-Calais space-charter agreement (26 Feb 2026), reshuffling rather than reducing ferry capacity. Source: concurrences.com, dfds.com. Evidence: strong.
8. The $1.18B EBITDA-by-2030 plan depends on third-party rail launches
Investor Day targets +2.3M Eurostar passengers by 2030 and +10M next decade, monetised through ETICA-Pax incentive scheme. Realising this requires Virgin (now eyeing ~2030 start per Rail Magazine 30 Apr 2026) and Trenitalia's $1.18B project (2029 target) to actually run. Evolyn was rejected for Temple Mills depot access. Slippage of these third-party launches breaks the medium-term thesis. Source: orr.gov.uk, railmagazine.com. Evidence: mixed — regulatory progress is real, but operators' commercial readiness is unproven.
9. S&P upgraded the rating to BB+ in March 2025
S&P raised Getlink to BB+ (from BB) and the CLEF securitisation vehicle to BBB+ in March 2025, citing deleveraging and dividend discipline. April 2025 $649M green notes at 4.125% (due 2030) replaced $998M of 2025 notes — a $295M gross debt reduction with maturity extension. Source: spglobal.com, morningstar.com. Evidence: strong, positive.
10. ElecLink visibility for 2026 is high
Q1 2026 release confirms 89% of 2026 ElecLink capacity sold ($335M revenue locked) and 36% of 2027 ($162M). Combined with the Q1 +112% revenue print, this offsets near-term Le Shuttle softness in the model. Source: press.getlinkgroup.com. Evidence: strong.
Recent News Timeline
What the Specialists Asked
Governance and People Signals
The shareholder bloc. Eiffage (France's #2 construction group) and Mundys (Italian infrastructure holding) together hold ~54.4% of capital and over 60% of voting rights, each parked just below the 30% mandatory-offer threshold. Both have publicly disclaimed control intent. The board now includes Andrea Mangoni (CEO of Mundys), replacing long-standing director Jean Mouton in July 2025.
Chair entrenchment. Jacques Gounon (73) remains chairman after the 2025 AGM raised the statutory age limit from 70 to 75. CEO Yann Leriche was reappointed in July 2024 for a 4-year term.
Auditor. KPMG rotated out; Deloitte & Associés appointed for a 6-year term effective FY24; Forvis Mazars reappointed. No qualified opinion found.
Pay and AGM 2026. AGM convened for 27 May 2026; variable comp cap proposal 120%→150% flagged in preparatory docs. No specific ISS/Glass Lewis recommendation surfaced in the data.
Eiffage is a major construction conglomerate that bids for infrastructure contracts. Note K of the URD 2024 reiterates "not significant, normal market conditions" for related-party transactions — boilerplate that has not changed despite the stake build to 29.4%. This is a disclosure gap worth pressing on at AGM.
Industry Context
The Channel cross-section is in three simultaneous structural shifts that the filings touch on but do not weight:
Cross-Channel competition is loosening on rail and freight but tightening on freight pricing. The French Competition Authority's 5 December 2025 clearance of DFDS/P&O capacity-sharing legitimises ferry coordination that has eroded Tunnel freight share to 35.5%. Simultaneously, EU ETS + FuelEU Maritime surcharges raise ferry carbon costs ~73% YoY in 2026 — a direct tailwind for Tunnel modal share that partially offsets the freight-share drift.
The Eurostar monopoly is being unbundled by regulators but commercial readiness lags. ORR's October 2025 approval of Virgin's Temple Mills depot access is real; Virgin's targeted ~2030 start is not. Trenitalia's $1.18B project targets 2029. Getlink's 2030 $1.18B EBITDA plan monetises this via ETICA-Pax — but every year of competitor delay pushes the path-revenue ramp further out.
FR-GB interconnector economics are normalising. ElecLink booked 89% of 2026 capacity by Q1, but FY25 revenue of $264M is less than half the 2023 peak of $617M. Greenlink (Wales-Ireland) commissioning and continued capacity additions across IFA/IFA2/BritNed compress spreads. The Q1 2026 +112% is on a depressed base; sustained run-rate is the unknown.
The S&P upgrade to BB+ (March 2025) and CLEF SPV to BBB+ confirms the financial-policy de-risking thesis. April 2025's $649M green notes at 4.125% due 2030 reduced gross debt by $295M and extended maturity. The credit story is the cleanest part of the file.