The defence supplier Vincorion has clawed back above its €17 IPO price after a rocky start, but the real test begins on 7 May when the company delivers its first quarterly results as a publicly traded entity. The stock has gained nearly 12% over seven trading sessions, and for the first time, that recovery has occurred without the stabilising hand of the underwriting banks.
A Changing of the Guard in the Shareholder Register
J.P. Morgan’s formal stabilisation period has expired. In its place, three large US asset managers have stepped in to absorb demand. Fidelity International, Invesco and T. Rowe Price each hold roughly 4% of the shares, according to the shareholder register. All three made binding purchase commitments totalling €105 million at the time of the IPO.
The shift in ownership has altered the balance of power at the top. Star Capital, the financial investor that took Vincorion private years ago, now holds 48.63% after the greenshoe option expired. That puts the former majority owner below the critical control threshold, and its remaining direct stake is locked up until autumn 2026. Large-scale share sales from that corner are not expected anytime soon.
Real-World Testing Underway
While the shareholder base has been reshuffled, Vincorion’s engineers have been busy in the field. The company has launched the field-testing phase for the EU’s SENTINEL programme, a €39.9 million project that brings together 42 partners. Vincorion is the coordinator and bears overall responsibility for the energy storage component.
The company is supplying two core modules: a 50-kilowatt generator and a 50-kilowatt energy storage unit. Both are designed to power mobile field camps independent of external infrastructure. Testing began at the Bundeswehr University in Munich, with international deployments in the Netherlands and Aruba to follow. SENTINEL is the successor to earlier EU defence programmes and is seen as a gateway to NATO procurement contracts.
That gateway has already opened slightly. The NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA) has awarded Vincorion a €60 million framework contract to modernise Patriot air-defence systems across five member states. The agreement runs until 2030.
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Numbers That Back the Narrative
The recent share price recovery is underpinned by solid financials. Revenue rose 18% last year to around €240 million, while net profit doubled to €19.4 million. EBIT climbed 64%. More than half of revenue comes from maintenance, repair and overhaul work — a service-heavy model that delivers predictable income and above-average margins.
Vincorion also supplies critical components for the Patriot and Iris-T air-defence systems, both of which are central to Europe’s Sky Shield initiative. Management estimates the addressable market for these solutions at €12 billion.
The company is targeting revenue of between €280 million and €320 million for the current year, which would represent growth of up to a third versus 2025. Crucially, Vincorion funds its expansion entirely from internal cash flow. The IPO did not raise fresh capital, so organic cash generation is the only engine.
The Valuation Discount and the 7 May Verdict
Despite the operational strength, the stock trades at a significant discount to its defence-sector peers. Vincorion’s price-to-earnings ratio stands at 46 based on 2025 earnings. That compares with 53 for Renk, 95 for Hensoldt and over 100 for Rheinmetall. The gap has not gone unnoticed, and the question of a re-rating hangs over the stock.
The answer may come on 7 May. That is when Vincorion presents its first quarterly report since listing. Management’s guidance for the year is ambitious, and the market will want to see whether rising European defence budgets are already translating into new orders. The Sentinel field test could also provide early signals on future contract wins.
This is the first real test without a safety net. With the banks’ stabilisation measures in the rear-view mirror, the operating story must do the heavy lifting. If the quarterly numbers show strong order intake, the recent upward move could gain traction. If not, the valuation discount may persist.
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