Rheinmetall's 28.4 RSI and a CEO's Insider Bet: Oversold Extremes Clash with a Broken Trend
Veröffentlicht: 29.06.2026 um 10:42 Uhr, Redaktion boerse-global.deThe aftershocks of the F126 frigate cancellation continue to rattle Rheinmetall shares, leaving the stock trapped between a deeply oversold technical reading and a shattered long-term trend. After plunging to a 52-week low of €902.50 on June 25, the shares have attempted to stabilise, trading near €957 in recent sessions. That bounce — modest and fragile — has done little to repair the damage: the stock is still down more than 18% on the week and has shed nearly 40% since the start of the year.
The trigger was the defence ministry’s abrupt halt of the F126 programme on June 24, citing cost overruns and schedule delays. Rheinmetall had been a key contender for the multi-billion-euro naval contract but lost out to TKMS, the German submarine builder. The market reacted instantly, wiping billions from the company’s market capitalisation, which now stands at roughly €44 billion. The loss of a flagship maritime project has forced investors to reassess the group’s earnings pipeline, even as management insists the core land-systems and munitions business remains robust.
Attention has now turned to a single technical indicator: the Relative Strength Index (RSI), which has fallen to 28.4 — a level that typically signals extreme overselling. For chart-watchers, such readings have historically preceded short-term reversals. Yet the broader technical picture tells a different story. The stock is trading nearly 38% below its 200-day moving average of €1,556.70, and the long-term uptrend that carried the shares from obscurity to a record high last October has been decisively broken. The gap between a possible mean-reversion bounce and a structural downtrend has rarely been wider.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Rheinmetall?
Adding a layer of complexity is a conspicuous insider purchase. CEO Armin Papperger bought shares worth several million euros during the sell-off, a vote of confidence that has not gone unnoticed. Such moves often signal that management sees value where the market sees risk. However, the CEO’s bet alone cannot offset the headwind of a cancelled €12.8 billion programme. The market is now weighing whether the remaining order book — which includes a fresh Bundeswehr contract for modernised “Büffel” recovery vehicles — can compensate for the lost naval business.
Bullish analysts point to the group’s operational strength and a full pipeline of ammunition and land-vehicle contracts as a buffer. They argue that if the €902.50 support level holds, a recovery toward the 50-day moving average of €1,226.82 is plausible. The insider buying reinforces that view, suggesting the current market cap already discounts too much bad news. A close above €960 — flagged by 4investors as a first positive signal — could add momentum to the rebound.
Yet the bear case is equally compelling. The collapse beneath the 200-day moving average marks a structural break that may take months to repair. Volatility has surged above 65%, a level that typically spooks institutional investors. Moreover, the F126 cancellation may signal a broader shift in Berlin’s defence procurement policy — one that could put other large-scale projects under scrutiny. Should the shares close decisively below €902.50, the next support zone does not appear until far lower levels, leaving the stock exposed to further declines.
The immediate catalyst lies ahead. Rheinmetall is scheduled to publish its half-year results on August 6, and the grace period until then is likely to be marked by sharp swings. Investors will demand concrete answers on how the company intends to fill the revenue hole left by the F126 termination and whether margins in the remaining backlog can hold up. Until then, the stock’s trajectory hinges on whether a 28.4 RSI — backed by a CEO’s own cash — can outweigh a broken trend line and a €1,500-plus gap to the long-term average.
Ad
Rheinmetall Stock: New Analysis - 29 June
Fresh Rheinmetall information released. What's the impact for investors? Our latest independent report examines recent figures and market trends.
