Eutelsat's Maritime Milestone and EU Spectrum Ambitions Collide in a Volatile Session
29.05.2026 - 17:52:15 | boerse-global.de
Eutelsat Communications capped a week of whipsaw trading on Friday, sliding 14.7% to €3.83 in Paris after earlier losses of more than 9% had briefly stabilised around €4.06. The sell-off came despite a major commercial win at sea and a €5 billion refinancing overhaul, as investors grappled with a fresh regulatory push from Brussels that could reshape the satellite sector.
The European Commission’s proposal on 27 May to harmonise the 2 GHz spectrum band from 2027 rattled a market already hypersensitive to policy headlines. Under the draft, national licensing patchworks would give way to a single EU-wide procedure, with one-third of commercial capacity reserved for new European operators and another third open to non-EU players. The remaining portion — earmarked for state use in security, defence and the IRIS² satellite system — would be exclusively for European operators. Eutelsat, already a cornerstone of the IRIS² consortium alongside SES and Hispasat, stands to benefit from the sovereignty-driven design, though the draft does not guarantee it a specific 2 GHz licence. The stock’s violent reaction suggests the market is still pricing the long-term value of Europe’s satellite ambitions.
Against that noise, the company quietly sealed a multi-year, multi-million-dollar expansion of its maritime partnership with Station Satcom. More than 1,000 vessels are now in the deployment pipeline for Eutelsat OneWeb’s low-Earth-orbit connectivity, building on hundreds activated in 2025. The hybrid GEO-LEO solution gives shipowners real-time data and low-latency broadband on busy shipping lanes, a growth vector the group is leaning on heavily as its legacy video business continues to shrink.
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That strategic pivot is showing in the numbers. For the third quarter of fiscal 2025/26, total revenue came in at €293 million — a nominal decline of 2.3%, but an adjusted increase of 3.1%. Connectivity revenue rose 15.3% to €155.7 million, with LEO sales surging 65%. Video revenue, by contrast, fell 13.3% to €128 million. The connectivity segment now represents 58% of future contracted revenue, and the order backlog stood at €3.4 billion as of 31 March. Management is targeting a 50% year-on-year jump in LEO revenue for the full fiscal year.
The company has also fortified its balance sheet. A refinancing programme worth over €5 billion was completed in the first half of 2026, including a €1.5 billion bond issue and a rights issue backed by major shareholders. Net debt-to-EBITDA is expected to settle at around 2.7 at the fiscal year-end. That gives Eutelsat financial headroom to fund its €2 billion contribution to the IRIS² constellation — a 290-satellite, €10.6 billion public-private partnership due to start service in 2030.
Yet for all the operational progress, the stock remains a volatility play. Annualised 30-day volatility sits near 100%, and Friday’s trading saw 7.7 million shares change hands. Since the start of the year, the equity has still gained 114%, and it trades 132% above its December 52-week low of €1.65. The narrative is increasingly shaped by LEO connectivity, direct-to-device services and sovereign infrastructure — but the execution clock is ticking, and Brussels’ spectrum policy is adding a fresh layer of uncertainty to an already high-beta story.
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