Defense electronics specialist Hensoldt has moved quickly to calm investor nerves after Germany’s defense ministry pulled the plug on the F126 frigate program, a €18 billion project that had been plagued by delays and spiraling costs. The cancellation directly affects a €200 million radar contract for the company’s TRS-4D naval surveillance system, but management insists the short- and medium-term outlook remains intact.
More than a third of that contract value has already been recognized as revenue, with only a low double-digit million euro amount still penciled in for 2026. Hensoldt is now in close discussions with its contractual partner Thales Netherlands to determine the fate of the remaining order backlog. The company stressed that the TRS-4D is not a bespoke piece of equipment — it belongs to a proven product family already deployed on the German Navy’s F125 frigates and K130 corvettes, as well as on Brazil’s Tamandaré-class frigates, which are built on the MEKO concept that Berlin is now turning to as a replacement.
Originally pegged at €10 billion, the F126 program’s budget ballooned to over €18 billion, prompting the ministry to cancel the six-ship order. In its place, the government is pursuing eight MEKO A-200 DEU frigates tailored for anti-submarine warfare. The first four vessels are expected to cost roughly €6.3 billion, pending approval from the budget committee, with an option for four more at around €5.3 billion that could be exercised by the end of 2026. For Hensoldt, that presents a fresh opportunity: the TRS-4D radar is already compatible with the MEKO platform, and the company is actively engaging with shipyards and customers to secure follow-on work.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Hensoldt?
The market reaction has been measured. Hensoldt shares closed at €70.90 on Wednesday, up 11.27% over the past seven days, though the stock remains 11.55% lower on a monthly basis and 23.48% down year-on-year. Technically, the shares are trading 7.51% below their 50-day moving average of €76.66 and 12.63% below the 200-day line of €81.15. The 52-week high of €115.10, set on October 3, 2025, is now 38.40% out of reach.
What matters most for investors in the near term is whether Hensoldt can tidy up the contractual loose ends from the F126 cancellation without denting its earnings guidance, and whether its sensor technology will find a place in the reconfigured naval procurement pipeline. The company’s first-round reassurance — that it sees no impact on its current forecast — offers an initial all-clear. But the final shape of the F126 wind-down and the size of any MEKO radar orders remain open questions that will determine whether this setback becomes a seamless handover or a lingering drag on the maritime division.
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