Rheinmetall's Naval Ambition Runs Aground as Berlin Hands F126 to ThyssenKrupp
Veröffentlicht: 26.06.2026 um 20:12 Uhr, Redaktion boerse-global.deThe German defense ministry’s decision to award the F126 frigate contract to ThyssenKrupp has torpedoed Rheinmetall’s ambitious push into naval shipbuilding, sending the Düsseldorf-based group’s shares to within a whisker of their 52-week low. The stock was changing hands around €945.30 on Friday, down nearly 22% over the past week, after hitting a fresh trough of €902.50 a day earlier. Since the start of the year, the shares have shed roughly 41% of their value, erasing billions of euros in market capitalization.
For chief executive Armin Papperger, the setback is a brutal reversal of a carefully laid plan. Rheinmetall acquired the NVL shipyard group in early 2026 with the explicit goal of becoming a prime contractor for Germany’s next-generation frigate program. The F126 project, originally envisioned for six vessels, was supposed to anchor the newly created Naval Systems division. Instead, Berlin opted for MEKO-class frigates from ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems, citing cost overruns and project risks. That decision leaves the NVL integration without an immediate anchor order, raising doubts about the economics of the acquisition.
The market’s reaction has been unforgiving. The stock now trades nearly 40% below its 200-day moving average of €1,561.76, a clear signal that the downtrend is deeply entrenched. The relative strength index, at 23.6, points to extreme oversold conditions — a level that has historically preceded sharp bounces. But technical indicators alone cannot repair the damage to the narrative.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Rheinmetall?
Analysts at Warburg Research argue the sell-off has already gone too far. They point to the group’s core land systems business, which continues to run at full capacity. The order backlog stands at roughly €73 billion, providing exceptional revenue visibility for years to come. Recent contract wins reinforce that strength: the Bundeswehr placed a three-digit million-euro order for 23 Büffel armored recovery vehicles, underscoring sustained demand for Rheinmetall’s traditional expertise in tanks, munitions, and electronics.
Yet the bear case is equally compelling. Without the volume from F126, the NVL acquisition risks becoming a costly misstep. Integration of the shipyard assets could weigh on margins, particularly if the division fails to secure alternative naval contracts quickly. The defense budget also faces pressures; reallocations could impact other Rheinmetall projects if Berlin shifts focus toward competing suppliers. On the chart, a sustained break below the €900 mark would likely accelerate selling, with the next support levels unclear.
For now, the focus turns to the half-year results due in early August. Until then, the €902.50 low serves as a critical floor. If that level holds, it may support the case for a base-building phase. If it cracks, the rout could deepen. For Papperger and his team, the immediate task is to craft a credible Plan B for the naval division — and to convince investors that the land-based core can carry the load alone, at least for the foreseeable future.
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