Magna International filings document the Canadian automotive supplier’s U.S. reporting as a foreign issuer, including Form 6-K submissions and Form 40-F annual materials. The filings include annual and interim results, Management’s Discussion and Analysis, audited and unaudited consolidated financial statements, financial review presentations, webcast transcripts, dividend declarations and certifications related to issuer disclosure controls.
Governance filings cover Magna’s board charter, committee charters, code of conduct, annual meeting record dates, common-share voting rights, director elections, auditor reappointment, say-on-pay results and board committee appointments. These documents also describe internal control over financial reporting and formal shareholder-meeting procedures.
Magna International Inc. reported softer 2025 results, with total sales declining 2% to $42.0 billion as lower vehicle production in North America and Europe, program roll-offs, and lower engineering revenue outweighed new program launches and currency tailwinds.
Income from operations before income taxes fell to $1.31 billion from $1.54 billion, largely because Other expense, net rose to $736 million, driven by a $591 million non-cash impairment in the Electronics reporting unit and additional asset and restructuring charges. Net income attributable to Magna decreased to $829 million, and diluted earnings per share declined 17% to $2.93.
On a Non-GAAP basis, Adjusted EBIT edged up to $2.36 billion, lifting Adjusted EBIT margin to 5.6% from 5.4%, and Adjusted diluted EPS rose to $5.73. Operating cash flow remained strong at $3.60 billion. Magna ended the year with $1.61 billion of cash and $3.9 billion of undrawn credit, after repurchasing 3.0 million shares and paying $1.94 per share in dividends. Deloitte LLP issued unqualified opinions on both the financial statements and internal control over financial reporting.
Magna International Inc. submitted a Form 144 notice of proposed securities sales. The filing lists multiple 02/17/2026 option exercise entries tied to common stock: 11,922, 1,836, 36,858, and 1,939 shares (per listed option exercises). The broker noted is J.P. Morgan Securities LLC.
Magna International reported proposed dispositions of common stock via Form 144, tied to option exercises. The filing lists securities to be sold following exercises of 2019 and 2020 nonqualified options on 02/18/2026, showing 5,473 and 4,851 shares respectively. The transactions are reported through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC as broker-dealer.
Magna International Inc. submitted a Form 144 disclosing proposed sales of Common Stock tied to option exercises dated 02/19/2026. The filing lists planned sales of 5,460, 1,849, 21,339, and 1,939 shares associated with various 2019–2020 option grants.
Magna International Inc. has set the key dates for its upcoming annual meeting of security holders. The meeting is scheduled for May 4, 2026, with the record date for notice, voting, and beneficial ownership determination fixed at March 16, 2026. Holders of Magna’s common shares as of that date are entitled to receive notice of the meeting and to vote. The company will use a notice-and-access approach for both registered shareholders and beneficial holders, and will pay for delivery of proxy-related materials to objecting beneficial owners.
A shareholder of Magna International Inc. filed a notice of proposed sale under Rule 144 to sell 33,885 shares of common stock through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. The filing lists an aggregate market value of $2,275,414.29 for these shares, to be sold on the NYSE around February 17, 2026. The notice states that there were 281,814,257 common shares outstanding, providing context for the size of the planned sale.
Magna International reported a strong finish to 2025 and raised expectations for 2026, highlighting improved profitability, robust cash generation and increased shareholder returns. In 2025, sales were $42 billion, slightly lower year-over-year, but adjusted EBIT rose to $2.4 billion with margin expanding to 5.6%. Adjusted EPS grew 6% to $5.73, while free cash flow increased by $849 million to $1.9 billion, supported by $3.6 billion of operating cash flow and disciplined capital spending at 3.1% of sales. In Q4, sales reached $10.8 billion (up 2%), adjusted EBIT margin improved to 7.5%, adjusted EBIT was $814 million (up 18%) and adjusted EPS was $2.18 (up 29%), with free cash flow above $1.3 billion. For 2026, Magna targets adjusted EBIT margins of 6.0%–6.6%, adjusted EPS of $6.25–$7.25 and free cash flow of $1.6–$1.8 billion, while planning to repurchase about 22 million shares under its buyback and continuing its 16-year streak of dividend increases.
Magna International reported mixed results for the fourth quarter and full year 2025. Q4 sales inched up to $10.8 billion, but a large non-cash impairment in its Electronics reporting unit drove Other expense, net to $629 million and resulted in a small net loss of $1 million, versus a $203 million profit a year earlier. Diluted EPS was effectively zero.
Underlying performance was stronger: Q4 Adjusted EBIT rose to $814 million from $689 million and adjusted diluted EPS increased 29% to $2.18. For 2025, sales were $42.0 billion, adjusted diluted EPS improved to $5.73, and free cash flow nearly doubled to $1.91 billion. Magna returned $544 million in dividends and $137 million via share repurchases, and raised its quarterly dividend to $0.495. For 2026, it targets total sales of $41.9–$43.5 billion, an adjusted EBIT margin of 6.0%–6.6%, adjusted EPS of $6.25–$7.25, and free cash flow of $1.6–$1.8 billion, while cautioning that recall and warranty exposures, including rearview camera issues with Ford, could be material.