The defense contractor Vincorion delivered a breath-taking 44.5% rise in quarterly sales last week, prompting Berenberg to lift its price target to €27 and reaffirm a “Buy” rating. Yet the stock sits at €19.05, still nearly 20% below its 52-week high of €23.78 hit on May 6 — a gap that has little to do with operations and everything to do with who owns the shares.
The company, based in Wedel, Germany, reported preliminary second-quarter revenue of €81.2 million and confirmed its full-year guidance of €280 million to €320 million in sales with an adjusted EBIT margin of 18% to 19%. Berenberg analyst Lasse Stueben, in a note dated July 13, cited the acceleration visible in the Q2 figures as the reason for raising his target from €26 and simultaneously increasing his own revenue forecast for the year. The stock responded by climbing 1.28% on Tuesday to €19.05, having touched an intraday high of €19.39 the previous session after the upgrade.
But the real story lies in the capital structure. Vincorion only listed in March, and free float stands at roughly 52.5%. The remaining 47.5% remains in the hands of private-equity firm STAR Capital, which used the IPO as an exit vehicle — not a capital raise. That block is subject to a lock-up agreement that runs until autumn 2026, and market participants fear a potential overhang once the restriction lifts. With a limited free float, even a modest sell-down could weigh on the share price. Institutional cornerstone investors such as Fidelity International, Invesco and T. Rowe Price are seen as possible buyers for large blocks, but few expect them to absorb a major supply shock entirely.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Vincorion?
The lock-up expiry is not the only date on investors’ calendars. Vincorion will publish its full half-year results in August, offering a chance to validate the preliminary numbers and clarify whether the company can fund its capacity expansion in Wedel, Essen and Altenstadt entirely from cash flow, as management has promised. Until then, the stock remains volatile: the 30-day annualized volatility stands at 52.1% to 52.4%, typical for a smaller, high-growth defense play, while the relative-strength index of 61 to 62 suggests buying pressure is present but not excessive.
That leaves room for further upside — provided the August numbers satisfy the market and the overhang from the STAR Capital stake becomes a manageable, rather than a dominant, factor in the stock’s trajectory. For now, the gap between the earnings trajectory and the share price tells the tale of two constraints: one operational, one structural.
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