TKMS shares staged a dramatic intraday reversal on Thursday, climbing in early trade after the Bundestag’s budget committee cleared a €6.3 billion frigate order, only to give back those gains and close lower as investors pocketed profits from a powerful multiweek rally. The stock ended the session at €85.60, down 4.25% from Wednesday’s close of €89.40, despite the double dose of positive news.
The parliamentary green light covers four MEKO A-200 DEU frigates for the German Navy, with an option for four additional vessels valued at roughly €5.3 billion. Delivery of the first ship is scheduled for December 2029. In a move that underscores Berlin’s focus on cost discipline, the budget committee attached a condition requiring quarterly reports on progress and spending. TKMS CEO Oliver Burkhard described the package as the largest surface-ship order in the company’s history.
This German award came on the heels of another landmark: on 6 July, Canada selected TKMS as the preferred supplier for its CPSP submarine program, which envisages up to 12 Type 212CD boats. The Canadian decision, which shut out South Korean rival Hanwha Ocean, was driven by NATO interoperability requirements and the existing joint submarine program with Norway. Analysts estimate the project could generate a GDP impact of around $86 billion for Canada over its life. Final contract talks may take up to 18 months, but TKMS has already begun discussions with Algoma Steel about potential steel supplies for the Canadian boats.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying TKMS?
Given the scale of the two orders — together securing work at TKMS’s Kiel and Wismar yards well into the 2030s — Thursday’s share-price decline appeared counterintuitive. But the retreat was consistent with a classic “buy the rumor, sell the fact” pattern. The stock had rallied 23.61% year to date through Wednesday, with gains of 6.60% over the prior seven days and 14.75% over 30 days. The annualized 30-day volatility stood at 82.63%, a level that makes sharp pullbacks almost inevitable after extended runs.
Technically, the shares remained comfortably above their 50-day simple moving average of €78.79 and the 100-day average of €83.38. The Relative Strength Index settled at 55.5, a neutral reading that leaves room for further upside without signaling overheating. Still, the stock trades 16.81% below its 52-week high of €102.90, touched on 26 January 2026, and the rapid ascent has left the equity vulnerable to profit-taking on any intraday slip.
Looking ahead, the frigate and submarine backlogs reinforce TKMS’s pivot toward becoming an integrated systems house, combining platforms, electronics, software and system integration under one roof — a strategy that the full absorption of ATLAS ELEKTRONIK is designed to accelerate. For now, the market’s focus has shifted from deal euphoria to the near-term reality that even a record order book cannot insulate a high-volatility stock from the instincts of traders taking chips off the table.
Ad
TKMS Stock: Buy or Sell?! New TKMS Analysis from July 9 delivers the answer:
The latest TKMS figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for TKMS investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from July 9.
TKMS: Buy or sell? Read more here...









