Eutelsat shares are caught in a violent swing, having rocketed to a 52-week high of €4.62 on May 28 only to collapse by roughly 22% in the span of a week. The stock closed Friday at €3.05, leaving it 34% below that recent peak despite a string of encouraging operational developments — including a high-profile deal to broadcast the 2026 FIFA World Cup in 4K. The annualised 30-day volatility has topped 100%, a level that signals far more than normal market noise.
The satellite operator is leaning heavily on such marquee contracts to defend its relevance in an increasingly streaming-dominated world. The M6 Group will transmit every World Cup match live and in Ultra-HD via Fransat, Eutelsat’s direct-to-home platform for French free-to-air channels, from June 11 to July 19. The tournament has expanded to 48 teams and 104 matches, up from 32 teams and 64 games in 2022, and 4K broadcasts demand significantly more bandwidth than standard HD streams — an argument Eutelsat will take to the NEM media summit in Dubrovnik from June 8-11. There, sales director Jakub Brzeczkowski will sit on a panel cheekily titled “The hybrid future of TV distribution in 2026 — Is satellite still ‘sexy’, relevant or just necessary?” The company will then head to the Casablanca Broadcast Days on June 9-10, keeping the focus squarely on broadcasting clients rather than investors.
The broader business narrative offers a more complex picture. Video revenue, the traditional cash cow, fell 13.3% in the fiscal third quarter to €128 million, weighed down by the loss of Russian satellite contracts. Connectivity, by contrast, grew 15.3% to €155.7 million, with OneWeb low-earth-orbit services surging 65%. Around 600 aircraft now use OneWeb systems, 15 airlines have signed agreements, and Japan Airlines recently opted for a combined GEO-LEO setup. In the maritime segment, more than 1,000 vessels sit in the deployment pipeline. Yet these operational gains have done little to soothe the market’s nerves.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Eutelsat?
The reason is clear: profitability remains a distant target as Eutelsat pours nearly €900 million in capital expenditure this fiscal year into its transformation into a connectivity powerhouse. That spending weighs on the EBITDA margin, a key metric for satellite investors. Management insists the strategy will pay off, targeting LEO revenue growth of 50% year-on-year, overall revenue roughly flat versus last year, and a long-term revenue goal of €1.5 to €1.7 billion by fiscal 2028/29 with an EBITDA margin of at least 65%.
With the current fiscal year ending June 30, the next official financial milestone is the full-year results on August 7. Until then, the share price will swing on speculation about whether the industry engagements in Dubrovnik and Casablanca translate into measurable contracts — or whether the market’s appetite for hard numbers will continue to trump diplomatic appearances on the conference circuit. For now, the stock is still trading above its 50-day moving average of €2.91 and its 200-day average of €2.67, suggesting the longer-term trend remains intact even as the short-term volatility tests investors’ patience.
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