While the stock price presents a different, more nuanced picture, Hexagon AB has been quietly expanding, acquiring, and reshaping its portfolio in the glass-and-steel offices that line Stureplan in central Stockholm, the area where Swedish corporate ambition tends to locate itself. This is something that most technology companies of its size rarely manage to sustain. The HEXA-B shares are currently trading between SEK 84 and 87, down almost 30% from the 52-week high of SEK 122.10 that was attained less than a year ago.
The analyst consensus views this range as a significant discount. The consensus target price is SEK 104.51, which is around 23% higher than the shares’ last trading level. There is a significant difference between what the market is willing to pay and what analysts believe the company is worth. Everyone who looks at the share price of Hexagon AB eventually needs to ask themselves, “Is this a company in real trouble, or is this a good business in a bad mood?”
The latter was strongly supported by the Q1 2026 figures, which were released in April. In the first quarter of 2026, Hexagon achieved 8% organic growth, a 26% operating margin, and 77% cash conversion, all of which were fueled by excellent results in Manufacturing Intelligence and Autonomous Solutions. A business that is having trouble with its basics doesn’t generate those kinds of numbers.
For an industrial technology firm of this complexity, the operating margin is strong, and a cash conversion rate in the high seventies indicates that reported earnings are being converted into real cash rather than being depleted by working capital or sitting in receivables. The company is operating smoothly. The lack of enthusiasm in the share price is either a hint that investors are looking at something that the quarterly results don’t completely capture or a problem with market efficiency.
Because the corporate activity surrounding the financial results is significant enough to impact the company’s appearance in two or three years rather than simply the upcoming quarter, it is worthwhile to look at it independently. The sale of the design and engineering division and the $1.45 billion acquisition of Waygate Technologies, which was defined as extending into regulated, high-growth industries and completing the measuring chain from surface to internal inspection, were two significant portfolio decisions in 2026.
Additionally, Hexagon is working on a spin-off called Octave Intelligence, which has two planned Nasdaq listings. When combined, these actions show a corporation actively altering its perimeter by acquiring capabilities it feels the industrial market will want and eliminating portfolio components it no longer views as essential. For investors attempting to forecast earnings, that type of reorganization creates real uncertainty, which could help to explain why the share price is where it is even while the operational figures appear to be in good shape.
The present price by itself does not convey the message that the 52-week range does. Over the previous 12 months, the shares have moved significantly in both directions, from a high of SEK 122.10 to a low in the low eighty. This suggests that the stock is not solidly anchored by a stable fundamental story, but rather is sensitive to changes in mood. For a firm that released the Q1 results it did, the share price has underperformed the FTSE Global All Cap Index by 16.3% over the last six months.
The underperformance compared to the global index is, at least in part, a reflection of broader caution surrounding European industrial technology stocks during a time when the macroenvironment has been unstable and where investors looking at the numbers in terms other than SEK face challenges due to currency dynamics between the Swedish krona and other major currencies.

Hexagon has been expanding through a patient acquisition strategy for decades. Between 2000 and 2022, the company made over 170 deals, including significant acquisitions like Leica Geosystems and MSC Software, each of which expanded its capabilities and geographic reach from its beginnings as a much smaller Swedish measuring instrument company.
It appears like the corporation is in the midst of another intentional transition rather than a period of difficulty when one looks at how the current portfolio is changing in comparison to previous past. It’s also uncertain if the share price will soon converge toward the analyst consensus or if investor sentiment will remain cautious longer than the fundamentals absolutely warrant due to the Waygate integration costs and the complexity of the Octave spin-off. The market’s current response to that query is the difference between SEK 84 and SEK 104. What makes the stock intriguing to watch is if it’s the correct response.
