Autoliv (NYSE: ALV) — The Safety Systems Leader at a Five-Year Valuation Trough

Autoliv (NYSE: ALV) — The Safety Systems Leader at a Five-Year Valuation Trough

Autoliv (NYSE: ALV) is the world's #1 automotive passive safety manufacturer with ~44% global market share in airbags and seatbelts. All three screening criteria pass: ROE has climbed from 22.8% (FY2023) to 27.0% (FY2025), FCF grew from $229M to $715M over three years, and trailing P/E of 12.92× sits 20.5% below its own five-year average. Key risks include insider selling, cyclical auto exposure, and a 43% forward P/E premium to auto-parts peers. Next verification point: Q2 2026 earnings on July 17.

US Stock Pick: 3-Year ROE > 15%
2026/5/20 · 21:46
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Autoliv, Inc. (NYSE: ALV) traded at $118.94 on May 20, 2026, near its 52-week high of $130.14. 1 Market capitalization stands at $9.14 billion on 76.81 million shares outstanding.
The trailing P/E has compressed to 12.92× — 20.5% below the stock's own five-year average of 16.26×. 2 Against the three hard screening criteria — sustained ROE above 15%, positive free cash flow, and reasonable valuation — the data confirms a pass on all three. The more interesting question is what is priced in at the current level.

What the company does

Autoliv is the world's largest automotive passive safety systems manufacturer. Founded in Sweden in 1953, it produces seatbelts, airbags, and steering wheels for virtually every major original equipment manufacturer (OEM) — including Volkswagen, BMW, Renault, Geely, and BYD. 3 The company is listed on the NYSE and headquartered in Stockholm, and it sits in the Consumer Discretionary sector under the Auto Parts industry classification.
Passive safety means the systems that protect occupants after a crash has already begun — as opposed to active safety systems such as automatic emergency braking, which try to prevent the collision. Every new vehicle sold globally is required by law to carry seatbelts, and airbag regulations are expanding across all major markets, including China and India. Autoliv's products are therefore not optional accessories; they are mandated components that every OEM must source from somewhere.
The business runs through 62 production plants across 23 countries, supported by 13 technology centers and approximately 64,000 employees. 3 In calendar 2025, those plants produced 143 million seatbelts, 143 million side airbags, 61 million front airbags, and 21 million steering wheels.

ROE: sustained above 20% and climbing

All four measurement periods clear the 15% threshold by a substantial margin.
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FY2023's ROE of 22.8% was the starting point of an upward trend that has not reversed. The progression to 24.8% in FY2024 and 27.0% in FY2025 reflects two simultaneous forces: operating margin recovery (from approximately 6.6% in FY2023 to 10.1% in FY2025) 4 and disciplined capital return through share buybacks rather than equity dilution. The TTM reading of 26.7% shows the trend has held into 2026. 2
By comparison, Forbes' five-year average ROE for ALV is 21.8%, meaning the current run rate sits 5 percentage points above that baseline — the business has improved, not merely maintained, its returns on equity. 4

Free cash flow

FCF has expanded significantly since its 2022 trough and reached a new high in FY2025.
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Free cash flow went from $229 million in FY2022 to $715 million in FY2025 — a 212% increase over three years. 5 The TTM figure from StockAnalysis, calculated as operating cash flow of $952 million minus capital expenditure of $502 million, stands at $450 million, with a corresponding FCF yield of approximately 4.95% at the current market cap. 2
The Q1 2026 operating cash flow was –$76 million — a seasonal pattern that frequently shows in Q1 for auto suppliers due to working capital build ahead of peak production. 6 Management's full-year 2026 guidance calls for approximately $1.2 billion in operating cash flow, which would imply continued FCF growth after subtracting expected capital expenditures.

Revenue and margin trajectory

Revenue has grown steadily from an estimated $8.26 billion in FY2021 to $10.82 billion in FY2025 — a four-year compound annual growth rate of approximately 7%. 7
PeriodRevenueYoY growthOperating marginNet margin
FY2023$10.48B+18.5%~6.6%~4.7%
FY2024$10.39B–0.8%9.4%6.2%
FY2025$10.82B+4.1%10.1%6.8%
Q1 2026$2.75B+6.8%8.6%5.2%
6 7 8
The standout in the table is the 3.5-percentage-point operating margin recovery between FY2023 and FY2025, driven by cost discipline, direct labor productivity improvements, and pricing actions taken with OEM customers. 4 Q1 2026 shows some margin compression — operating margin fell to 8.6% from 9.9% in Q1 2025 — but Autoliv's CEO Mikael Bratt stated the quarter turned out better than anticipated: 6
"The first quarter turned out better than we had anticipated, with strong sales in March... Our operational performance exceeded our expectations, with solid productivity improvements."
Management reiterated full-year 2026 guidance of approximately flat organic sales growth and an adjusted operating margin of 10.5–11%. 6 The Q1 organic sales growth of +0.8% outperformed global light vehicle production (LVP) — which fell 3.4% — by 4.2 percentage points, with particularly strong performance in China (outperformed LVP by 40 percentage points) and India (+38% organic growth).
Net income grew from approximately $488 million in FY2023 to $646 million in FY2024 (+32%) and $735 million in FY2025 (+14%), with Q1 2026 net income at $142 million against $167 million a year earlier. 8 6

Valuation: below its own history, above its peers

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The trailing P/E of 12.92× is 20.5% below Autoliv's own five-year average of 16.26× (range: 11.6× in 2024 to 21.8× in 2023). 9 EV/EBITDA of 7.57× is similarly below its five-year average of 7.96×. P/B at 3.68× is slightly above the five-year average of 3.29× — the one metric where the stock is not discounted — which reflects the fact that book value has expanded alongside the improving ROE. 10 11
Peer comparison (TTM data; all figures from StockAnalysis unless noted):
CompanyBusinessTrailing P/EForward P/EEV/EBITDAP/B
ALV — AutolivGlobal passive safety #112.9212.157.573.68
LEA — Lear Corp.Automotive seating & E-Systems11.958.234.911.07
MGA — Magna InternationalDiversified Tier-1 auto supplier10.318.144.920.97
BWA — BorgWarnerPowertrain & EV propulsion41.52†8.775.721.51
APTV — AptivVehicle electrical architecture & ADAS58.43†9.607.161.78
CTTAY — Continental AGTires & automotive technologyN/M‡N/A~5.63.23
† BWA and APTV trailing P/E are distorted by one-time charges that depressed TTM earnings. Forward P/E is the more relevant comparison for both. ‡ Continental AG trailing P/E is not meaningful — TTM net income was –$456 million due to restructuring and automotive division losses.
The peer picture requires two readings. Against trailing earnings, ALV's 12.92× sits close to the peer range once BWA and APTV's distorted figures are excluded — comparable to Lear (11.95×) and Magna (10.31×). On a forward basis, however, ALV's 12.15× is a 43% premium to the peer median of 8.50× (calculated from LEA 8.23×, MGA 8.14×, BWA 8.77×, APTV 9.60×). 2
The forward premium has a plausible explanation: ALV's ROE of approximately 26–30% towers over LEA's, MGA's, and BWA's single-digit or low-teen equivalent figures. When a business generates nearly 30% returns on equity, the market assigns a structural premium — and ALV's P/B of 3.68× versus the peer median of 1.51× reflects precisely that gap in capital efficiency. Whether that premium is earned or overpriced depends on how sustainable those returns are.

Balance sheet

Autoliv's balance sheet is investment-grade with manageable leverage.
MetricValueSource
Debt-to-equity0.89StockAnalysis / Q1 2026
Interest coverage (EBIT / interest)10.11×StockAnalysis
Current ratio (Q1 2026 MRQ)1.08Yahoo Finance
Total debt$2.22–2.25BStockAnalysis / Yahoo Finance
Cash & equivalents$237–342MStockAnalysis / Yahoo Finance
Leverage ratio (company-reported)1.3×Q1 2026 earnings
The company-reported leverage ratio of 1.3× is comfortably below management's stated target ceiling of 1.5×. 6 Two of three major rating agencies rate the debt investment grade: Moody's at Baa1/Stable and Fitch at BBB+/Stable. 17 S&P previously assigned BBB/A-2 but withdrew those ratings in November 2025 at the issuer's request — a procedural withdrawal rather than a credit deterioration event. 17 Fitch's November 2025 affirmation cited "Resilient Profitability," "Healthy FCF," and "Robust Capital Structure." 18
One caveat: the Altman Z-Score of 2.73 sits below the 3.0 threshold typically associated with financial safety. That reading is worth noting but requires context — Autoliv's negative working capital (–$306 million) and asset-light global manufacturing model structurally suppress the Z-Score relative to companies that hold more current assets. With $1.2 billion in guided operating cash flow for FY2026 and interest coverage above 10×, the actual cash generation capacity is better than the Z-Score alone reflects. 2

Competitive moat

Autoliv's market position is the clearest quantitative moat available in the auto parts sector. The company holds approximately 44% global passive safety market share across all three product lines: seatbelts (~45%), airbags (~44%), and steering wheels (~44%). 3 The next-largest competitor, ZF (formerly TRW's safety division, now branded LIFETEC), holds an estimated 20–24% share; Joyson Safety Systems holds approximately 15–20%. 19
Three sources underpin the moat's durability:
Scale and cost position. Producing 143 million seatbelts per year across 62 plants in 23 countries generates procurement leverage and manufacturing efficiency that smaller suppliers cannot replicate. In FY2025, Autoliv executed a restructuring program that eliminated 2,000 indirect positions and achieved production efficiency gains equivalent to 6,000 direct labor positions, generating approximately $130 million in annualized savings. 3 The Turkey facility closure, which carried a $142 million restructuring charge, is part of the same capacity optimization.
Intellectual property. Autoliv holds 14,048 global patents — 8,554 already granted — across 7,286 patent families, with a USPTO grant rate of 91.94%. 20 Annual R&D investment was $413 million in FY2025 (3.82% of revenue), accelerating to a TTM rate of $438 million through Q1 2026. 21
Customer switching costs. Safety system design is integrated into a vehicle's structural engineering from the earliest development phases. Replacing Autoliv on a new vehicle program means re-validating crash test performance, regulatory compliance, and supply chain logistics — a 12–24 month process that no OEM undertakes casually mid-program. This structural stickiness is visible in Autoliv's consistent market share despite active competition from ZF, Joyson, Toyoda Gosei (automotive safety systems manufacturer), Daicel (chemical and safety systems), Continental AG, Bosch, and Denso.
One structural risk worth examining: Chinese OEMs now account for a growing share of Autoliv's business, with China segment sales up 23% in FY2025. 3 This is revenue growth, but Chinese OEMs also have stronger incentives to develop domestic safety suppliers — a longer-run pressure on share, not an immediate one.

Risks

Insider selling, no buying. In the quarter through May 20, 2026, Autoliv insiders net-sold 22,124 shares worth approximately $2.7 million — with zero open-market purchases recorded. 22 CEO Mikael Bratt sold 8,974 shares at an average of $123.51 on February 24, reducing his direct stake by 23.45%. 22 Over the past five years, Bratt's transaction record is 6 sells and 0 buys. Insider direct ownership stands at approximately 0.34% of shares outstanding (narrow definition, excluding director RSU awards). These transactions are consistent with routine compensation vesting, but the all-sell, zero-buy pattern over multiple years is a fact worth noting.
Cyclical exposure. Autoliv's revenue moves with global light vehicle production. FY2024 saw revenue decline 0.8% when LVP contracted. Q1 2026 organic growth of +0.8% outperformed a 3.4% LVP decline, demonstrating some insulation through content-per-vehicle growth, but a sustained automotive downturn would pressure margins. 6
Supply chain and tariff exposure. The 10-K lists supply chain disruptions, tariffs, and geopolitical factors as explicit risk categories. 3 Autoliv's 23-country manufacturing footprint provides geographic diversification, but does not eliminate exposure to bilateral trade tensions affecting specific OEM supply chains. The financial magnitude of tariff exposure is not publicly quantified.
Debt load and Q1 cash flow. Total debt of $2.22–2.25 billion against $237–342 million in cash produces a net debt position of approximately $1.9–2.0 billion. 2 Q1 2026 operating cash flow turned negative at –$76 million (versus +$77 million in Q1 2025), driven by working capital timing. 6 The debt is currently manageable given 10× interest coverage, but a prolonged production slowdown would tighten that cushion.
Litigation — mostly resolved. The two most significant recent legal proceedings have cleared. Volvo Cars withdrew its OSS airbag cartel claim against Autoliv in October 2025 (though its parallel claim against ZF continues), and a similar Stellantis claim was dismissed by the UK Competition Appeal Tribunal in February 2025. 23 Autoliv's FY2024 10-K Item 3 disclosed no material pending litigation. A five-count patent infringement suit filed in December 2023 by Big Will Enterprises settled 32 days later with no recorded judgment. 24
Short interest. Short interest is low at 2.69% of float (approximately 1.93 million shares, 2.65 days to cover), reflecting limited active bearish conviction in the name. 25
CFO transition. CFO Fredrik Westin resigned for personal reasons in mid-2025 and joined AkzoNobel in January 2026. His replacement, Monika Grama, assumed the role on April 1, 2026 — an internal promotion from VP Finance EMEA, where she had served since 2020. 26 CEO Bratt described her as bringing "extensive experience from multiple leadership roles in finance coupled with strong management experience and Autoliv knowledge." The transition appears orderly, though Grama will face her first full earnings cycle as CFO with Q2 2026 reporting.

Catalysts and market context

Next earnings. Q2 2026 results are expected on July 17, 2026. 6 Q1 2026 set a constructive baseline: adjusted EPS of $2.05 beat the consensus of $1.91 by 7.3%, and revenue of $2.75 billion beat the consensus of $2.61 billion by 5.4%. 22 A second consecutive beat against the reiterated full-year guidance would provide tangible evidence that the margin recovery is durable through 2026.
Analyst consensus. Of 13 analysts covering ALV, 8 rate it Buy and 5 Hold, producing a consensus of Moderate Buy. The 12-month average price target is $135, with a range of $111–$150, implying approximately 13.5% upside from the current price of $118.94. 22 Recent rating actions include BofA initiating with Buy at $140 (April 16) and RBC raising its target to $138 with an Outperform rating (April 20). Analyst price targets carry systematic upward bias; the consensus is a directional signal, not a forecast.
52-week range. The 52-week range is $98.45–$130.14. 22 At $118.94, the stock sits at approximately 85% of its 52-week high — near the top of its range rather than in the bargain bin. The P/E discount is to the stock's own five-year history, not to a beaten-down recent price.
Dividend. Autoliv pays $0.87 per share per quarter ($3.48 annualized), with the Q2 2026 dividend announced May 6, ex-dividend date May 20, and payment on June 8. 27 At $118.94, that is a yield of approximately 2.93%. The payout ratio is 37%, meaning the dividend is covered more than 2.6× by earnings. The annual dividend has grown from $2.58 in 2022 to $3.12 in 2025 (+20.9% over three years), with a notable 13.9% raise in 2025 alone. 27 A separate $2.5 billion buyback authorization runs through December 2029; Autoliv repurchased 3.1 million shares for $351 million in 2025. 3

Opportunity and risk structure

The fundamental picture is strong on most dimensions. ROE has expanded from 22.8% to 27.0% over three consecutive fiscal years. FCF tripled from $229 million in FY2022 to $715 million in FY2025. The operating margin has recovered from approximately 6.6% in FY2023 to a guided 10.5–11% for FY2026. The balance sheet carries investment-grade ratings from Moody's and Fitch, and the company generates enough cash to fund its $3.48 dividend, its buyback, and its $400+ million annual R&D budget simultaneously. The Q1 2026 results beat on both revenue and earnings.
The valuation case rests on a specific argument: trailing P/E at 12.92× sits 20.5% below Autoliv's own five-year average, and EV/EBITDA at 7.57× is marginally below its five-year average of 7.96×. On those two metrics, the stock is priced below where it has historically traded against its own earnings power — and that earnings power is now demonstrably higher than it was when the stock commanded those historical averages.
The counterarguments are real. Forward P/E of 12.15× is a 43% premium to the peer group's median of 8.50×, which means the premium demands justification — primarily the ROE gap. The stock is already near its 52-week high, which limits the margin of safety for buyers entering now. Global auto production is softening in 2026, and the Q1 2026 margin compression (operating margin fell to 8.6% from 9.9% a year earlier) is a reminder that this is a cyclical industry where cost discipline alone does not fully offset volume headwinds. CEO selling at $123+ while the stock trades at $118 is not a bullish alignment signal, even if it reflects routine compensation vesting.
The most direct near-term verification point is Q2 2026 earnings on July 17. Management has reiterated the full-year adjusted operating margin target of 10.5–11%; a second-quarter result that keeps the margin trajectory on track, combined with any improvement in the China OEM growth rate and India momentum, would support the case that the Q1 margin dip was seasonal rather than structural.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past financial performance does not guarantee future results.

参考来源

  1. 1Autoliv (ALV) Stock Price & Overview — StockAnalysis
  2. 2Autoliv (ALV) Statistics & Valuation — StockAnalysis
  3. 3AUTOLIV INC SEC 10-K Report — TradingView
  4. 411 Best Undervalued Stocks To Buy Now In May 2026 — Forbes
  5. 5Autoliv Free Cash Flow 2012-2026 — Macrotrends
  6. 6Autoliv Financial Report January – March 2026 — PR Newswire
  7. 7Autoliv Revenue 2012-2026 — Macrotrends
  8. 8Autoliv Net Income 2012-2026 — Macrotrends
  9. 9Autoliv Inc (NYSE:ALV) P/E Ratio — Investing.com
  10. 10Autoliv (ALV) P/B ratio — Companies Market Cap
  11. 11EV/EBITDA For Autoliv Inc (ALV) — Finbox
  12. 12Lear Corporation (LEA) Statistics & Valuation — StockAnalysis
  13. 13Magna International (MGA) Statistics & Valuation — StockAnalysis
  14. 14BorgWarner (BWA) Statistics & Valuation — StockAnalysis
  15. 15Aptiv (APTV) Statistics & Valuation — StockAnalysis
  16. 16Autoliv, Inc. (ALV) Key Statistics — Yahoo Finance
  17. 17Credit Rating — Autoliv
  18. 18Fitch Affirms Autoliv, Inc. at BBB+; Outlook Stable — Fitch Ratings
  19. 19Top Companies in ICE & BEV Seatbelt Material Market — MarketsandMarkets
  20. 20Autoliv Patents — Insights & Stats — GreyB
  21. 21Autoliv Research and Development Expenses 2012-2026 — Macrotrends
  22. 22Autoliv, Inc. (NYSE:ALV) Receives Average Rating of "Moderate Buy" — MarketBeat
  23. 23Main Developments in Competition Law and Policy 2025 – Sweden — Kluwer Competition Law Blog
  24. 24Big Will Enterprises v. Autoliv: Patent Infringement Action — PatSnap
  25. 25ALV — Autoliv Inc Stock Quote — Finviz
  26. 26Autoliv announces appointment of new CFO — PR Newswire
  27. 27Autoliv Inc (NYSE:ALV) Dividend History — DividendInvestor

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