The Stockholm Stock Exchange has opened the trading day roughly unchanged. Thursday's performance mirrors that of leading European markets. The news flow is highlighted by quarterly reports from Kinnevik and SLP, which are moving in opposite directions in terms of share price.
Around 09:20, the OMXS30 index was down 0.10 percent at 3,115.37. Shares worth approximately SEK 2.2 billion were traded on the Stockholm Stock Exchange.
Among the major industrial sectors, technology saw the best performance with a 1.1 percent gain. At the other end of the scale, energy lagged behind, falling 0.9 percent.
Among the leading shares included in the OMXS30 index, Boliden rose 2.0 percent while Evolution was up 1.2 percent. The weakest performers were Saab B, down 2.7 percent, and Tele 2 B, which fell 2.2 percent.
Investment company Kinnevik's net asset value plunged 22 percent in the first quarter to SEK 100.75. This compares with SEK 129.51 at the end of the previous quarter and SEK 130.59 at the end of the same period last year. As a result, the share retreated 1.5 percent.
Real estate company Sagax established new financial targets for 2026-2030, aiming for a return on equity of at least 12 percent per year and an increase in profit from property management per share of 5-10 percent per year. Over the past five years, the average return has been 14 percent, while earnings per share have increased by 15 percent annually. The dividend policy remains unchanged. The share was down 3.6 percent.
Short-selling firm Grizzly Research has leveled sharp criticism against communication services company Sinch in a report. The share initially fell but has since traded up around 3 percent. The criticism is primarily directed at the American voice service Inteliquent, which Sinch acquired in 2021 and is a major financial contributor to the group. Grizzly identifies Inteliquent, which is under regulatory scrutiny, as the single largest player behind scam calls and robocalls in the Western Hemisphere, and criticizes Sinch for compliance failures.
Technology company Sivers Semiconductors, which has performed exceptionally well on the exchange recently, approved a directed share issue raising approximately SEK 125 million before transaction costs. In connection with this, the company also stated that it is evaluating a dual listing of its shares in the US. Sivers rose 2.3 percent.
Logistics property company SLP rose 1.6 percent in early Thursday trading. Profit from property management increased by 29.9 percent to SEK 174 million.
Real estate investment company Fastator announced that it will write down the value of its holding in Företagsparken by SEK 48.4 million in its annual report, compared to the 2025 year-end report. Additionally, one of Fastator's subsidiaries has sold properties for SEK 312 million. The share was down 5.7 percent.
Among today's equity recommendations, Castellum was upgraded to buy from hold by Nordea, and the share was up 0.6 percent. Dustin increased 6.2 percent after Handelsbanken raised its recommendation to buy from hold. Nordea upgraded Wallenstam to hold from sell, and the share traded 0.1 percent lower. Sveafastigheter was downgraded to hold from buy by Nordea and fell 1.2 percent. Gränges saw its recommendation lowered to hold from buy by Kepler Cheuvreux and was down 2.4 percent.
For the telecom duo Telia and Tele2, both ABG Sundal Collier and Kepler Cheuvreux have lowered their recommendations. ABG downgraded Telia to sell from hold, while Kepler downgraded to hold from buy. Tele2 was downgraded to hold from buy by both ABG and Kepler. Telia fell 2.7 percent, while Tele2 retreated 2.4 percent.
Stockholm Flat at Open - Kinnevik and SLP Diverge Following Reports
Published on 04/16/2026 at 08:42 am BST
Finwire
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Translated by Marketscreener
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