VIV.PA
$1.71-0.06 (-3.36%)
Vivendi SE operates in the content, media, and entertainment industries in France, rest of Europe, the Americas, Asia/Oceania, and Africa.
Recent News
Vivendi’s 2025 Profit Return Tested By Lagardère Probe And Prisma Talks
Vivendi reports a return to profitability in 2025, following a prior year of significant losses. The company remains under an ongoing European Commission probe related to its Lagardère acquisition. Vivendi has entered talks to acquire a stake in Prisma Media’s luxury division, signaling potential expansion in premium media assets. For investors watching ENXTPA:VIV, these developments come after a challenging share price run, with the stock down 10.3% over the past week, 19.3% over the past...
Vivendi SE (VVVNF) Full Year 2025 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Financial Turnaround and ...
Vivendi SE (VVVNF) reports a profitable year with significant debt reduction and strategic focus on media and entertainment, despite challenges in portfolio valuation.
Assessing Vivendi (ENXTPA:VIV)’s Valuation After a Recent Share Price Pullback
Vivendi (ENXTPA:VIV) has had a choppy run lately, with the share price sliding about 20% over the past month, even as net income has surged and its diversified media portfolio keeps throwing off cash. See our latest analysis for Vivendi. Zooming out, that steep 30 day share price return of about minus 20 percent comes after a multi year total shareholder return that is still strongly positive. As a result, the latest pullback looks more like fading near term momentum than a broken long term...
Vivendi (VIVHY) Moves to Buy: Rationale Behind the Upgrade
Vivendi (VIVHY) has been upgraded to a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy), reflecting growing optimism about the company's earnings prospects. This might drive the stock higher in the near term.
French court hears opening arguments in Bolloré/Vivendi break-up dispute
(Reuters) -France's highest civil court heard arguments on Tuesday in a legal dispute that could require the billionaire Bolloré family to buy out minority shareholders of Vivendi for several billions of euros. Vivendi's lawyer Alain Benabent argued that the appeals court had "exceeded its powers", while Bolloré's lawyer argued that it had wrongly broadened the interpretation of control beyond majority voting rights, urging the Cour de Cassation to adhere to a narrower reading of French corporate law. "The Bolloré group does not control Vivendi" he stated, downplaying the personal influence of Vincent Bolloré.