Dividends, Diversification, Deal Options: RE Royalties Quietly Builds a Green Finance Platform
If a survey were conducted in Germany asking what people envision when they think of the energy transition, one would likely hear 1,000 different perspectives. The Canadian specialty financier RE Royalties is taking an interesting approach by providing a key building block: innovative financing for green energy projects. The Canadian company is increasingly establishing itself as a kind of renewable energy licensor, combining elements of traditional infrastructure financing with modern ESG principles. Instead of operating wind or solar plants itself, RE Royalties participates in the projects’ revenues through revenue-based compensation models, thereby creating an inflation-resistant cash flow profile. This model is reminiscent of streaming approaches from the commodities sector or long-term YieldCo structures, albeit with significantly lower operational complexity.
Particularly exciting is the company’s current strategic realignment, as after more than a decade of growth, management is now exploring partnerships, capital measures, or even a full transaction to unlock hidden reserves. Such processes are often viewed in the capital markets as a precursor to a revaluation, especially when stable cash flows and scalable business models converge. At the same time, the company is further expanding its position in the US solar market and recently invested additional funds in a broadly diversified portfolio with projects across multiple states. In total, RE Royalties now controls more than 100 investments in solar, wind, hydropower, and battery storage, giving it a remarkably diversified platform.
The recurring revenues increasingly resemble the coupons of sustainable infrastructure bonds, albeit with additional growth potential driven by rising electricity prices and the massive expansion of AI data centers and electric mobility. The continuity of distributions is also noteworthy, as solid dividends have been paid over many quarters—a rare hallmark of quality in the volatile cleantech sector. Should global capital demand for green infrastructure continue to accelerate as expected, royalty models in the ESG sector could attain the same strategic importance in the future as licensing fees in the software industry or streaming contracts in mining. The stock is up over 40% in 2026. But following the current consolidation, it offers solid entry prices! Electrifying!
COO Peter Leighton will explain his strategy for the current year at the 19th International Investment Forum. Click here to register.

TeamViewer – Between Cost-Cutting and Growth Doubts
The sell-off correction for remote software expert TeamViewer reached as low as EUR 4.11. First-quarter figures were released in recent days. Analysts are divided, but investors are gradually returning. Currently, the Göppingen-based company is navigating a remarkable balancing act between operational discipline and slowing growth momentum. Although revenue shrank slightly again in Q1 to around EUR 183 million, the efficiency program launched in 2024 is now visibly taking effect behind the scenes. Particularly striking is the significant jump in profitability and operating income, even though demand in key regions such as North and South America lost noticeable momentum. The adjusted EBITDA margin climbed to a robust 45%, signalling that the software group has significantly streamlined its cost base. Above all, the massive reduction in marketing expenses acted as a turbocharger for the margin, ensuring that EBIT and net profit could grow by double digits despite weaker revenues.
At the same time, however, a sensitive aspect of the business model is becoming apparent. The number of smaller corporate customers continues to decline; customer loyalty in the enterprise segment appears to be waning, and even existing customers are being more cautious with their budgets. From a regional perspective, Europe remains the group’s anchor of stability, while the Americas and Asia are currently acting more like brakes. Nevertheless, management remains steadfast in its annual forecast and is counting on a recovery in the second half of the year. On the stock market, this mix of cost discipline and confidence was initially met with euphoria, and the stock market responded with a double-digit price jump. Behind the short-term relief, however, the central question remains: whether TeamViewer can return to organic growth in the future, or whether the rising profits stem primarily from cost-cutting measures and financial fine-tuning. Analysts on the LSEG Refinitiv platform generally agree on a fair value of around EUR 9, though Deutsche Bank puts it at a low EUR 6.50 and DZ Bank remains rather cautious at EUR 7.00.
PayPal – New Leadership, New Momentum
Finally! At payment service provider PayPal, a phase of radical restructuring is beginning under new CEO Enrique Lores, after the company lost much of its market lustre. A cost-cutting program worth billions is intended to squeeze out high costs from the system and eliminate inefficient, duplicative structures in the coming years. At the same time, management is attempting to strategically realign the company for the modern era. The aim is to focus more strongly on high-margin core businesses. Operationally, PayPal has recently proven more resilient than many market participants had expected. Despite all market doubts, payment volume grew by double digits, and the company also delivered a positive surprise on the earnings front. Nevertheless, investors reacted skeptically to the announced major restructuring, and the stock lost significant ground again following the Q1 results. Apparently, concerns are growing in the market that the company can no longer keep pace technologically with modern fintech platforms and digital wallet providers. This is precisely where CEO Lores is now stepping in, aiming to both modernize the technical infrastructure and integrate artificial intelligence more deeply into internal processes. The coming quarters are therefore likely to be a decisive test. Meanwhile, the estimated 2026 P/E ratio has even fallen to a low of 8.7, despite an annual free cash flow of over USD 6 billion. The stock is a bargain!

In the current environment, investors should focus more on long-term expectations for stocks rather than betting on short-term price fluctuations. This is because, first, daily volatility causes extreme swings that are completely irrelevant, and second, a surprising resolution to one of the numerous geopolitical conflicts could quickly trigger a rally, which, in the age of algorithmic and AI trading, can unfold within minutes.
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