Kontron’s third quarter will be the moment of truth. That is when a planned €126 million injection from a division sale is due to land in its coffers, just as the last of 500 job cuts are completed at the loss-making GreenTec unit. Until then, investors have to digest a first quarter that married blistering growth in defence and transportation with an operating cash flow that turned sharply negative.
The cash flow swung to minus €9.1 million in the first three months, compared with a slight positive a year earlier. Supply chain bottlenecks forced Kontron to build up inventory, while nearly €33 million worth of finished goods are stuck as undelivered customer orders. Management expects that backlog to clear by year-end, but the drag on liquidity is already apparent.
The strain is concentrated in the GreenTec division, where a sweeping restructuring is under way. Five hundred roles will be eliminated by August 2026 at a one-off cost of €25 million, after which the segment is expected to generate annual savings of more than €30 million. Kontron aims to return GreenTec to profitability by the fourth quarter. The third-quarter cash injection from the sale of another business unit should provide the balance sheet with a much-needed cushion while the overhaul plays out.
Elsewhere, the operational picture is far brighter. The transportation segment expanded by 27.8% in the first quarter, while defence and aerospace rose 25.2%. Global military spending and infrastructure modernisation are fuelling demand, and the order book has swelled to a record €2.5 billion. New orders continue to outstrip execution, pointing to sustained revenue momentum.
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At the group level, comparable revenue edged up to just under €364 million. Adjusted EBITDA came in at €46.1 million, and management is sticking to its organic growth target of 8% for the full year. However, the 2026 adjusted operating result forecast of €225 million fell short of the analyst consensus, which had pencilled in as much as €246 million. Large acquisitions are off the table for now, as the uncertain economic climate counsels caution.
Overhanging all of this is the unresolved question of Ennoconn’s stake. The Foxconn-linked major shareholder has been given board clearance to push its holding above the 30% threshold, which would trigger a mandatory takeover offer. Ennoconn is thought to be considering a price of €23.50 per share. Kontron has already aligned its own share buyback cap with that level, effectively putting a lid on any near-term upside above the offer price.
The stock closed on Friday at €22.90, narrowing the discount to the potential offer to just 60 cents. Over the past month, the shares have climbed by a healthy 11%, helped by the bid speculation and the solid operational performance in defence and transportation. The 50-day moving average has been left well behind, and the longer-term downtrend is now in the crosshairs.
For the longer term, Kontron has not scaled back its ambitions. The company still targets revenue of €2.6 billion by 2030. But the immediate milestones are set for the third quarter: the €126 million sale proceeds must hit the bank, the restructuring must be largely finished, and the margin improvement from both must become visible. If those pieces fall into place, the cash drain will be plugged and the boardroom drama over Ennoconn’s next move can play out from a position of financial strength.
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