Nearly two months after its Frankfurt debut, VINCORION has finally pushed decisively above its €17 IPO price. The defense contractor’s shares now trade at €17.71, marking a modest but symbolic victory for a stock that initially struggled to find its footing. The market capitalisation stands at €876 million.
The Wedel-based company’s valuation remains conservative compared to peers. With a price-to-earnings ratio of 46, VINCORION trades at a significant discount to rivals. RENK commands a P/E of 53, HENSOLDT trades at 95, and Rheinmetall’s multiple exceeds 100. Analysts point to the company’s brief public history as one explanation for the gap.
Yet institutional investors from across the Atlantic have already placed their bets. US fund giants Fidelity International, Invesco, and T. Rowe Price each hold stakes of roughly four percent, according to shareholder registers. Their positions have grown in influence since the bank-led price stabilisation measures following the IPO expired.
Service Revenue Provides the Backbone
The investment case rests on a sturdy foundation. VINCORION grew revenue by 18 percent to around €240 million last year, while net profit doubled to just over €19 million. Operating profit surged 64 percent to nearly €34 million.
The engine behind those numbers is the aftermarket business. Maintenance, repairs, and upgrades account for 55 percent of total sales. The company operates as the sole supplier for many platforms, locking in long-term service contracts that generate predictable, high-margin income. The core of this model is obsolescence mitigation — upgrading ageing components in existing military systems to keep them operational.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying VINCORION?
VINCORION supplies critical components for systems including PATRIOT and IRIS-T, both pillars of the European Sky Shield initiative. Management estimates the addressable market for its energy and mechatronics solutions at €12 billion, suggesting considerable room for expansion.
First Quarterly Test Looms
The company faces its first major test as a listed entity in early May, when it publishes its inaugural quarterly report. The management must demonstrate that order intake supports its ambitious targets. For the current year, the board is targeting revenue between €280 million and €320 million — growth of up to 33 percent.
The report will also reveal whether rising European defence budgets are translating into concrete new orders, or whether the aftermarket segment continues to shoulder the growth burden.
A longer-term concern hovers on the horizon. The lock-up period for majority shareholder STAR Capital expires in autumn. The private equity firm still controls nearly half of VINCORION’s shares. When the lock-up agreements lapse, large blocks of stock could hit the market, potentially weighing on the share price. Until then, the free float remains structurally constrained.
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