Fidelity and a Bundeswehr Mega-Order Give Renk’s Stock a Twin Boost
29.05.2026 - 09:11:19 | boerse-global.deThe stars are aligning for Renk. On Thursday, the German transmission specialist saw its shares surge more than 5% in XETRA trading, closing at €55.78 — a jump of 5.9% that made it the day’s top performer in the MDAX. Two powerful catalysts, one from the share register and one from the battlefield, drove the move.
Fidelity Moves In as KNDS Steps Back
The clearest signal of institutional confidence came from Boston-based FMR LLC, better known as Fidelity. The US asset manager has quietly built a position past the 5% voting-rights threshold, crossing the 3% and 4.94% marks along the way. The disclosure landed as a statement: while other investors grew nervous after defence-engineering group KNDS trimmed its Renk holding, Fidelity saw a buying opportunity.
The timing is telling. Renk’s stock touched its 52-week low of €42.12 on 13 May — a level that now sits roughly 30% below the current price. By 27 May, the shares had already broken through the 50-day moving average at €52.37 from below, a classic technical buy signal. Thursday’s rally confirmed the breakout.
Rheinmetall’s Order Pulls Renk Alongside
But the technicals aren’t the whole story. The Bundeswehr has exercised a call under an existing framework contract with Rheinmetall for more than 2,000 military transport vehicles, a deal with a gross value exceeding €1 billion. Renk supplies the driveline components and transmissions for a large share of those vehicle types, so the order flows directly onto its books.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Renk?
During Thursday’s session, Renk’s share price peaked at €56.63 before trimming gains. Trading volume hit nearly 730,000 shares, well above average. The relative strength index now sits at 73.4, flashing overbought territory, but the seven-day return of 13.63% shows sustained buying pressure.
The ripple effect extended across the German defence sector: TKMS advanced 6.4% and Hensoldt added 2.1%. Analysts see the Bundeswehr’s call-off as evidence of robust planning security in the country’s arms industry. Renk itself has locked in more than 90% of its planned 2026 revenue through contracts already signed.
Board Refresh and Dividend Plans
Meanwhile, corporate governance is getting an overhaul. At the annual general meeting on 10 June, Dr. Klaus Richter is set to take the chair of the supervisory board from Claus von Hermann. Richter brings deep defence and aerospace credentials — he was formerly CEO of Diehl and a long-serving manager at Airbus. The appointment strengthens Renk’s network in the European defence ecosystem.
CEO Alexander Sagel stays put. His contract has been renewed early, running through 31 March 2032. The message from Augsburg is one of continuity at the top combined with fresh oversight.
On the dividend front, management and the supervisory board recommend a payout of €0.58 per share for the past year, in line with the target payout ratio of 40% to 50% of adjusted net income. For the current year, analysts expect the figure to rise to €0.723 per share, based on consensus estimates. The order backlog stands at approximately €6.9 billion, giving the group high visibility for the rest of the financial year.
Renk at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.
Earnings Momentum and Analyst Confidence
The fundamental picture supports the optimism. In the first quarter of 2026, earnings per share jumped from €0.01 to €0.15, while revenue edged up about 4% to €283.61 million. For the full year, Renk’s management targets revenue above €1.5 billion and adjusted EBIT in a range of €255 million to €285 million.
Analysts remain bullish. The average price target sits at €66.71, roughly 20% above current levels. Jefferies, DZ Bank and Deutsche Bank all maintain positive ratings. With the half-year report due on 6 August, the market has time to digest the new shareholder structure and the order inflow.
Geopolitical tensions — most recently around the Strait of Hormuz — continue to underpin demand for defence systems globally. The German financial regulator BaFin has stepped up monitoring of insider trading in the defence sector, a telling sign of the industry’s growing weight on the capital market. For Renk, the combination of a patient, deep-pocketed US backer and a concrete order from Berlin makes for a powerful narrative.
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