Aroundtown SA AT1.DE
Aroundtown SA (AT1.DE) earns a Piotroski F-score of 5/9 (mixed financial health), with an Altman Z″ in the grey zone. It pays a dividend yielding 7.16% (safety: no dividend). FY2025 revenue was €1.2B at a 73.7% net margin.
Analyst price target
Wall Street analyst consensus — a sentiment gauge, not our scoring.
About Aroundtown SA
Aroundtown SA, together with its subsidiaries, operates as a real estate company in Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and internationally. The company operates through Commercial Portfolio and GCP Portfolio segments. It invests in commercial real estate properties, including hotel, office, retail, logistics, and other properties, as well as in residential real estate properties. The company also engages in financing activities. Aroundtown SA was incorporated in 2004 and is based in Luxembourg, Luxembourg.
How it ranks in Real Estate · percentile among 34 companies
Percentile vs other Real Estate companies we cover — e.g. “stronger than 90%” means only 10% score higher on that measure.
Piotroski F breakdown · 5/9 tests passed
- Positive return on assets
- Positive operating cash flow
- Rising ROA
- Cash flow exceeds net income
- Lower long-term debt
- Rising current ratio
- No share dilution
- Rising gross margin
- Rising asset turnover
Altman Z″ components · grey zone
| Component | Value |
|---|---|
| Working capital / assets | 0.078 |
| Retained earnings / assets | 0.182 |
| EBIT / assets | 0.028 |
| Equity / liabilities | 0.64 |
FAQ
Is AT1.DE financially healthy?
Aroundtown SA's Piotroski F-score is 5/9 (8–9 is excellent, 0–3 weak), and its Altman Z″ distress score is in the grey zone.
Does AT1.DE pay a dividend, and is it safe?
Yes. Aroundtown SA pays a dividend yielding about 7.16% with a None payout ratio, rated “no dividend” for safety.
How profitable is AT1.DE?
In FY2025, Aroundtown SA had a net margin of 73.7% and a return on equity of 7.3%.
Computed from company filings · DE · as of 2025-12-31. Figures in EUR. Facts plus Stocktoria's own computed scores — not investment advice.