Autoliv

ALV
Financial Analysis · Updated June 10, 2026 · Coverage 2026-Q2

Business Overview


step: 01 title: Business Model & Overview ticker: ALV company: Autoliv, Inc. source: coverage-next-full date: 2026-06-09

Step 01 — Business Model: Autoliv, Inc. (ALV)

1. Business Summary

Autoliv, Inc. is the world's largest supplier of automotive passive safety systems — occupying the critical layer between a vehicle crash and passenger injury [S1]. Founded in 1953 by Swedish inventor Gösta Sundner (inventor of the modern seatbelt retractor), the company has grown through decades of organic expansion and acquisitions into a $10.8B revenue industrial manufacturer with ~44% global market share in its category.

The business is simple to describe: Autoliv gets paid $260 per vehicle (global average) to install airbags and seatbelts. OEMs legally cannot sell a car without them. No car rides without Autoliv's products — or a near-identical substitute from one of three viable competitors globally.

2. Value-Chain Layer Map

Raw Materials (steel, textiles, chemicals, propellants)
        ↓
Component Manufacture (inflators, retractors, buckles, cushions, steering wheel frames)
        ↓
[AUTOLIV — System Integration Layer]
  • Airbag modules (frontal, side, curtain, knee, center, driver, far-side)
  • Steering wheel systems (incl. pad, airbag, controls)
  • Seatbelt systems (retractor, buckle, pretensioner, load limiter)
  • Increasingly: battery safety switches (EV), motorcycle airbags, wearable airbags
        ↓
OEM Customers (Toyota, VW, Stellantis, GM, Renault-Nissan, Hyundai, Geely, etc.)
        ↓
End Consumer / Regulator (crash standards, NCAP ratings, national mandates)

Autoliv sits at the system integration layer — it designs and assembles the complete passive safety system, sources components internally and externally, and delivers to OEM production lines on a just-in-time basis. This layer has high barriers: (1) deep OEM qualification cycles (3–5 years to win a platform award), (2) product liability exposure requiring certification expertise, and (3) global footprint to mirror OEM production locations.

3. Revenue Architecture

By Product (FY2024):

  • Airbags, Steering Wheels & Other: $7,023M (67.6%)
  • Seatbelt Products & Other: $3,367M (32.4%)

By Geography (FY2024):

  • Americas: $3,424M (33%)
  • Europe: $2,946M (28%)
  • China: $2,010M (19%)
  • Asia excl. China: $2,010M (19%)

Customer Concentration:

  • Top 5 customers: ~44% of FY2024 net sales [S2]
  • Top 10 customers: ~71% of FY2024 net sales
  • Largest OEM groups: Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi (~11%), Stellantis (~11%), VW Group (~10%), Toyota (~9%)

Revenue Model: Long-term platform supply contracts (5–7 year terms). Revenues fluctuate with OEM production volumes (LVP) and Autoliv's market share on each vehicle model. Annual productivity price-downs (typically 1–3%) offset partially by: new model launches at higher content, commercial recoveries for inflation, and content-per-vehicle growth.

4. Business Model Economics

Metric Value Notes
Content per vehicle (global avg.) ~$260 FY2024 company disclosure [S2]
Content per vehicle (high-income markets) ~$340 Company disclosure
Content per vehicle (China domestic OEMs) ~$200 Company disclosure
Content per vehicle (India) ~$120 Company disclosure; upside from mandates
Gross margin 18.5% FY2024; expanding from 15.8% FY2022
Adj. operating margin 9.7% FY2024; target 12% medium-term
R&D (net) 3.8% of sales FY2024 ($398M net, $612M gross)
CapEx 5.6% of sales FY2024 ($579M); target ~5%
OCF conversion ~100% of net income FY2024: $1,059M OCF / $648M NI

5. Competitive Position

Autoliv competes in a globally oligopolistic market:

  • Autoliv: ~44% global share
  • Joyson Safety Systems (China-backed): ~20–22%
  • ZF Lifetec (formerly ZF TRW, seeking strategic options): ~15–18%
  • Toyoda Gosei (Toyota affiliate): ~10–12%

No OEM can qualify a new passive safety supplier in less than 3–5 years. New entrant economics are prohibitive (scale required to amortize R&D, certification burden, product liability exposure). The market has been consolidating since Takata's 2017 bankruptcy, and structural consolidation benefited Autoliv and JSS.

6. Growth Drivers

  1. Regulatory content expansion: India 6-airbag mandate (enacted 2023), Euro NCAP 2022/2025 upgrades (far-side airbags, new crash tests), NHTSA MY2027 changes → structural increase in airbag count per vehicle, driving CPV higher independent of LVP
  2. Organic market share gains: Autoliv outperformed global LVP by +1.6pp in FY2024, +2–3pp historically
  3. EV content opportunity: Battery safety switches, foldable steering wheels for AV mode, wearable airbags — emerging product categories
  4. China domestic OEM growth: Domestic OEM share of China revenue grew from 28% → 37% in FY2024; offset by lower ASP (~$200 vs. $260 global avg.)
  5. Buyback-driven EPS acceleration: Share count declining ~5% annually; diluted shares fell 87.2M (FY2022) → 74.7M (FY2025) [S3]

7. Key Risks

  1. LVP cyclicality — Autoliv's revenue tracks global vehicle production, which is inherently cyclical
  2. China domestic OEM in-sourcing / BYD self-supply risk
  3. Tariff/trade policy uncertainty (2025 tariffs explicitly excluded from guidance)
  4. Customer concentration (top 5 = 44% of revenue)
  5. EV transition asymmetry — domestic Chinese EV OEMs carry lower content per vehicle

Source Index

| [S1] | SEC 10-K FY2024, CIK 0001034670 — business description, filed 2025-02-20 | | [S2] | SEC 10-K FY2024 — customer concentration, content-per-vehicle data | | [S3] | StockAnalysis.com ALV financials + XBRL shares outstanding data, retrieved 2026-06-09 |

Financial Snapshot


step: 04 title: Financial Quality & Adversarial Sweep ticker: ALV company: Autoliv, Inc. source: coverage-next-full date: 2026-06-09

Step 04 — Financial Quality & Adversarial Sweep: ALV

1. Income Statement Quality

Revenue Recognition

Autoliv recognizes revenue upon transfer of control — typically at point of delivery to the OEM assembly line or at the shipping dock (per customer contract terms). Revenue is not recognized on long-term contract basis; it is transactional per delivery [S1]. This is straightforward for an industrial manufacturer — minimal revenue recognition complexity.

Quality Assessment: HIGH. No channel stuffing indicators; revenue tracks OEM LVP with reasonable precision.

Non-GAAP Adjustments

Autoliv reports two primary non-GAAP adjustments:

Item FY2022 FY2023 FY2024
Capacity Alignment Charges $207M $218M $19M
Antitrust & Legal $8M $8M
Total Non-GAAP Adjustment $207M $226M $27M

Capacity alignment charges (FY2022–FY2024) relate to a genuine structural headcount reduction program (targeting 2,000+ indirect employees, mostly in Europe). These are legitimate one-time costs, not recurring — evidenced by the $207M → $218M → $19M step-down as the program completed. GAAP-to-adj. bridge is well-disclosed, precise, and externally verifiable through headcount data.

Quality Assessment: HIGH. Non-GAAP adjustments are transparent and declining as the restructuring program completed.

Tax Rate Anomalies

FY2023 effective tax rate (20.1%) was unusually low due to deferred tax reversals related to restructuring provisions. FY2024 rate normalized to 26.0%; FY2025 target ~28% [S2]. The FY2023 EPS of $5.72 overstates normalized earnings power by ~$0.30–0.50/share. Adjusted EPS FY2023 ($8.19 adj. vs. $5.72 GAAP) better captures underlying performance.

Quality Assessment: Note. FY2023 GAAP NI/EPS depressed by restructuring, but disclosed and visible.

2. Balance Sheet Quality

Working Capital
  • Receivables (FY2024): $1,993M → DSO ~70 days on $10.4B revenue (normal for automotive tier-1 with 60–90 day OEM payment terms)
  • Inventories (FY2024): $921M → inventory turns ~11.3× (COGS / inventory) — healthy for auto parts
  • Payables (FY2024): $1,799M → DPO ~77 days — well-managed; Autoliv has supplier leverage
  • Working capital trend: improved in FY2024 as supply chain normalization reduced safety stock
Goodwill & Intangibles
  • Goodwill: portion of $1,375M net goodwill/intangibles (FY2024). Autoliv has made bolt-on acquisitions over decades; no single large acquisition requiring scrutiny since Takata/KSS (which went to JSS). Goodwill has been stable; no impairment indicators visible.
Debt Structure
  • Short-term debt: $387M (FY2024)
  • Long-term debt: $1,522M (FY2024)
  • Total debt: $1,909M; Net debt: $1,579M (at $330M cash)
  • Debt/EBITDA: ~1.2× (($979M EBIT + $387M D&A) ≈ $1,366M EBITDA; $1,909M / $1,366M ≈ 1.4×)
  • Maturities: Autoliv maintains a well-laddered maturity profile through revolving credit facilities and term bonds [S1]

Quality Assessment: CLEAN. Balance sheet is solid for the industry; net debt is manageable vs. $1B+ annual OCF.

3. Cash Flow Quality

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 FY2025
Net Income $423M $488M $646M $735M
OCF $713M $982M $1,059M $1,157M
OCF / NI ratio 1.69× 2.01× 1.64× 1.57×
FCF (OCF–CapEx) $128M $409M $480M $716M
FCF / NI ratio 0.30× 0.84× 0.74× 0.97×

OCF consistently exceeds net income — primarily due to D&A ($363–387M/year) exceeding SBC and other non-cash charges. FY2022 FCF was depressed by elevated capex ($585M) and working capital build; FY2024–2025 FCF inflection is genuine, reflecting OCF improvement and capex discipline.

Capex trajectory: FY2022 $585M → FY2023 $573M → FY2024 $579M → FY2025 $441M. The FY2025 capex step-down to $441M (4.1% of revenue, below the 5% target) is notable — reflects moderation of new platform tooling investment.

Quality Assessment: HIGH. Cash generation is real and improving. FCF conversion inflecting as restructuring costs abated and capex moderated.

4. Adversarial Research Sweep

A. Short Seller Activity

No prominent short reports on ALV identified. Short interest: ~4.02M shares (5.37% of float) as of June 2026 — elevated but not extreme for a large-cap industrial [S3]. No active short theses found in public databases.

B. Antitrust History
  • Autoliv (along with TRW/ZF and Takata) was involved in historical price-fixing investigations in the automotive safety components market (circa 2011–2015). DOJ investigations resulted in guilty pleas and fines from multiple suppliers.
  • Autoliv settled and entered deferred prosecution agreements. Ongoing "antitrust related items" costs: $4M (FY2023), $8M (FY2024) — residual tail of historical matters, not new investigations.
  • Risk level: LOW-MODERATE. Historical matter substantially resolved; residual costs declining. New investigations possible but no current known proceedings.
C. Product Liability
  • Autoliv's primary product liability risk is defective airbag inflators (the Takata crisis was the catastrophic industry example: 67M+ recalls, 27 deaths attributed to ammonium nitrate inflators).
  • Autoliv proactively replaced ammonium nitrate inflators across its product line after Takata's failures became public. Autoliv's inflators are AZIDE-based (alternative propellant technology).
  • Product liability accruals are maintained but no major new investigations or class actions disclosed in recent filings.
  • Risk level: MODERATE-ONGOING. The product liability risk is inherent to safety-critical manufacturing; it is the "Takata risk" that every investor in this sector must model.
D. Customer Disputes / Contract Risks
  • Autoliv disclosed commercial disputes with certain customers over extraordinary inflation recovery compensation (FY2022–2023). These have largely been resolved through negotiations.
  • No material ongoing customer litigation disclosed in recent 10-K.
E. China / Governance Risks
  • No Autoliv-specific fraud, manipulation, or governance failure identified.
  • Swedish-American corporate governance; Stockholm listing imposes additional disclosure standards. Board (11 directors, 10 independent) meets high governance standards.
  • Cevian Capital activist presence (12% stake) since early 2025 is a positive governance catalyst — capital return program ($2.5B buyback) emerged at June 2025 CMD [S4].
F. Environmental / Legal
  • Autoliv disclosed environmental matters (legacy facility cleanup obligations) but these are routine for industrial manufacturers; no material accruals flagged.
  • Labor relations: global workforce with union representation in various markets; no disclosed major disputes.
Adversarial Sweep Summary

No material undisclosed risks identified. Known risks (antitrust tail, product liability, China OEM transition) are disclosed, quantifiable, and actively managed. No short-side thesis found. Governance quality high. Financial statements appear reliable and high quality.

5. Key Statement-Quality Adjustments for Modeling

Adjustment FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 Notes
Capacity alignment add-back +$207M +$218M +$19M Restructuring, not recurring
Antitrust add-back +$8M +$8M Tail of settled matters
Tax rate normalization Normalize to ~26% 26.0% actual FY2023 rate was 20.1% — abnormally low
Adjusted Operating Income $762M* $920M $1,007M More useful baseline
Normalized Net Income (est.) ~$500M ~$660M $646M FY2023 NI elevated by low tax; FY2024 is clean

*FY2022 adj. OPM estimated; capacity alignment $207M pre-tax

Source Index

| [S1] | SEC 10-K FY2024 — revenue recognition policy, debt schedule, working capital | | [S2] | SEC 10-K FY2024 — tax rate discussion (MD&A), FY2025 guidance (28% ETR) | | [S3] | ALV_financials/other/consensus.md — short interest data | | [S4] | ALV_financials/proxy/governance_and_compensation.md — Cevian Capital stake |

Deeper Financial Analysis

The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $ALV.

Revenue Breakdown
Segment revenue, geographic mix, product-line contribution margins, and cohort dynamics.
Financial Trends
Quarter-over-quarter momentum, leading indicators, and inflection point analysis.
Balance Sheet
Debt structure, liquidity runway, dilution risk, and working capital dynamics.
Capital Allocation
Buyback cadence, M&A appetite, dividend policy, and reinvestment priorities.
Returns on Capital (ROIC)
Multi-year ROIC vs. WACC, marginal returns on reinvestment, sales-to-invested-capital efficiency, and moat spread.
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