Rheinmetall’s 15% Bounce Masks a Longer-Running Reckoning on Factory Firepower
29.05.2026 - 04:21:18 | boerse-global.de
The euphoria that once greeted every new Rheinmetall contract announcement has given way to a more sceptical mood. Investors are no longer impressed by the sheer volume of orders piling into the Düsseldorf defence group’s backlog; they want proof that those orders can be turned into profit without margins getting singed on the production line.
That shift in sentiment has left the stock nursing a 35.28% decline from its 52-week high of €1,995.00, touched on 29 September last year. The shares closed on Thursday at €1,291.20, a level that represents a 15.49% bounce from the 52-week low of €1,118.00 hit on 13 May. That low coincided with the ex-dividend date for an interim payout of €11.50 per share — a small nod to continuity in a tumultuous period. On a weekly basis the stock added 5.71%, but year-to-date the loss still stands at 19.38% and over twelve months the shares are down 31.52%.
The recent rally, though welcome, looks technically stretched. The 14-day relative strength index sits at 84.1, firmly in overbought territory and signalling that the recovery may be running out of near-term steam. An annualised 30-day volatility of nearly 51% underscores the edgy backdrop. The gap to the 200-day moving average of €1,636 remains more than 21%, and even the shorter 50-day line at around €1,384 still towers above the current price.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Rheinmetall?
Behind the technicals lies a more fundamental reckoning. After months of celebrating multibillion-euro framework agreements, the market has pivoted to asking whether Rheinmetall’s supply chains and production capacity can handle the load without eroding margins. Several brokerages have already trimmed their price targets in response to the growing mismatch between long-term ambition and quarterly delivery. The company’s market capitalisation of €57.59 billion underscores its heft, but that valuation now hinges on operational execution rather than headline-grabbing orders.
For long-term holders, the beaten-up share price offers a potential entry point — but the path back to the highs will require patience. The Erholungsrally of the past two weeks has been encouraging, yet until Rheinmetall provides concrete evidence that its factories are firing on all cylinders, the stock will remain hostage to the same question that has driven the correction: can the company deliver as fast as the world is demanding it to?
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