Wall Street Cuts Lincoln Electric as Industrial Recovery Already Priced In

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Lincoln Electric (LECO) reported record adjusted EPS of $9.87 in 2025 and generated $534.2M in free cash flow, but faces a persistent 6.4% consolidated volume decline in Q4 that signals weakening demand.

  • Jefferies downgraded Lincoln Electric to Hold, arguing the industrial recovery is already priced into consensus estimates which exceed the company’s own guidance, leaving limited upside at the $280 price target despite strong fundamentals.

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Wall Street Cuts Lincoln Electric as Industrial Recovery Already Priced In

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Jefferies downgraded Lincoln Electric Holdings (NASDAQ:LECO | LECO Price Prediction) from Buy to Hold on March 31, 2026, cutting its price target from $350 to $280. The core argument: the industrial recovery is already captured in consensus estimates and may not fully materialize, leaving the stock with limited upside from current levels.

Ticker Company Firm Old → New Rating New Price Target One-Line Takeaway
LECO Lincoln Electric Jefferies Buy → Hold $280 Recovery priced in; macro risk limits near-term upside

The Analyst’s Case

Jefferies acknowledges Lincoln Electric has “solid leverage” to an industrial recovery, but the firm argues the cycle is early and increasingly exposed to risk. Critically, consensus growth estimates exceed the company’s own guidance, creating a setup where estimates face downward pressure even if Lincoln executes well. The new $280 target sits above the current price of $244.27, but the gap has narrowed considerably after a sharp pullback.

Company Snapshot & Recent Performance

Lincoln Electric is a Cleveland-based welding equipment manufacturer operating 71 manufacturing and automation facilities across 20 countries. Full-year 2025 results were strong: record adjusted EPS of $9.87, up 6.2% year over year, on revenue of $4.233 billion. Q4 adjusted EPS of $2.65 beat the $2.55 consensus estimate, though revenue of $1.079 billion missed estimates slightly. A persistent 6.4% consolidated volume decline in Q4 underscores the demand-side tension Jefferies is flagging.

Why the Move Matters Now

The stock ran from roughly $174 in April 2025 to a 52-week high of $310 before retreating. It has since dropped 14.9% over the past month and sits 17.7% below its post-earnings filing price. The trailing P/E stands at 26x with a forward P/E of 23x, not extreme, but full enough that any estimate cuts would bite. The broader industrial production index sits at 102.55, near its 12-month high, which supports Jefferies’ view that recovery momentum is already reflected in pricing. Stifel independently maintains a Hold rating, citing concerns over market cyclicality.

What the Downgrade Signals

Lincoln Electric’s fundamentals remain intact. CEO Steven B. Hedlund noted the company is “looking ahead to driving growth, higher profitability and returns” through its new RISE strategy and 2030 targets. Free cash flow of $534.2 million and $507 million in total shareholder returns in 2025 reflect a disciplined operator. The question Jefferies raises is one of timing and valuation, not business quality. With the consensus analyst target still at $305.56 and KeyBanc maintaining a Buy with a $340 target, the Street remains divided. The path to meaningful upside likely depends on whether volume trends reverse in 2026, with the consensus target of $305.56 implying room above current levels if estimates hold.

Photo of Joel South
About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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