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Celanese (CE) generated $773M in free cash flow in 2025, up 45.57% year over year, and targets $650-750M for 2026, while its Acetyl Chain segment posted $940M in Q4 2025 revenue and stands to benefit from acetic acid supply compression driven by Middle East disruptions.
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Citi raised Celanese’s price target to $81 from $75 based on commodity chemical repricing expectations following potential Strait of Hormuz closure by Iran, which would compress global acetic acid supply and restore margin for integrated producers.
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Celanese Corporation (NYSE:CE) has staged a sharp recovery in 2026, gaining 35.77% year-to-date. The stock’s one-week gain stands at 9.15%, though shares are up just 8.43% over the past year and down more than 66% from their five-year high in January 2022.
Wall Street’s consensus price target sits at $63.12, reflecting a cautious analyst community. Now Citi has broken from that pack, raising its price target on CE to $81 from $75 with a Buy rating. But can CE realistically reach $81 by the end of 2026?
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Citi’s upgrade centers on a significant upward revision to commodity chemical forecasts driven by the Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which is disrupting global chemical capacity and shipments. The geopolitical pressure is real: prediction markets are pricing a 99.95% probability of Iran closing the Strait by year-end 2026, backed by over $51 million in total trading volume. WTI crude has surged to $95.41 per barrel as of March 12, up more than $23 in a single week, validating the supply shock thesis that underpins Citi’s revised chemical price deck.
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Commodity chemical repricing: Celanese’s Acetyl Chain segment, which posted $940 million in Q4 2025 revenue, down 15% year over year, is most exposed to feedstock dynamics. A sustained oil and energy price spike compresses global acetic acid supply, potentially restoring pricing power and margin for integrated producers like Celanese.
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Free cash flow discipline: Despite a difficult 2025, Celanese generated $773 million in free cash flow, up 45.57% year over year, and is targeting $650 to $750 million in 2026. That cash engine supports ongoing deleveraging and positions the company to compound value through the cycle.
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Balance sheet stabilization: The completed Micromax divestiture for approximately $500 million, combined with a new $1.75 billion revolving credit facility extending through 2030, reduces near-term refinancing risk and gives management room to execute on recovery.