Rollins has turned pest control into a dependable, subscription-like cash machine—growing organically, tucking in bolt-on deals and keeping churn low. With a seasoned bench, dense routes and disciplined pricing, the company keeps margins steady even as rivals regroup.
Linde quietly dominates industrial gases with dense networks, proprietary engineering and long-term take-or-pay contracts that pass through energy costs, keeping cash flows steady.
SIG’s shopping spree—Scholle IPN and Evergreen—blurred its aseptic razor-blade edge, lifted leverage, and squeezed margins. The reset hands Ola Rollén a clear brief: prune the commodity pieces, migrate what’s upgradeable to aseptic economics, and rebuild the core duopoly story.
Amrize, Holcim’s U.S. spin-off, pairs irreplaceable quarries with premium roofing—and trades at a discount to peers. A long-term buy.
From its origins as a specialized Swiss engineering firm, Stadler Rail has evolved into a formidable global competitor, uniquely positioned between niche market dominance and mainstream contention.
The worldwide elevator and escalator market is projected to expand to roughly 166 billion US‑dollars by 2028, an annualised growth rate close to six per cent from 2024. Asia‑Pacific—particularly China and India—continues to supply most of the new‑equipment demand, whereas industrialised OECD economies increasingly focus
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