A flurry of insider buying by top executives has failed to arrest a steep year-to-date decline in Circus SE’s share price, setting the stage for a pivotal quarterly update on April 16th. The company must now prove its pipeline of interest in its AI-powered kitchen robot, the CA-1, can translate into firm, revenue-generating contracts.
Despite the 37% drop since January, CEO Nikolas Bullwinkel and Supervisory Board Chairman Dr. Jan-Christian Heins have been active buyers in recent weeks. Heins, for instance, purchased shares on March 13th at approximately €6.36 each. Their confidence stands in stark contrast to the broader market sentiment, though the stock has rebounded from its 52-week low of €5.44 hit in late March. Currently trading around €7.60, the share recently crossed above its 50-day moving average at €7.51, a move some analysts view as a potential signal for short-term stabilization after a 22% weekly gain.
The core challenge for Circus is commercial conversion. The company has amassed over 8,000 non-binding pre-orders for the CA-1 robot, representing a theoretical value exceeding €1.6 billion. To date, this has converted into 500 firm orders from roughly 40 customers. The critical unknown, and the central focus for the April 16th call, is how many of these units have progressed into binding sales agreements that will actually recognize revenue.
Operational progress is visible through several pilot projects. The German Bundeswehr is testing the CA-1 for autonomous catering, REWE is running a trial in Düsseldorf, and Mercedes-Benz catering plans deployment at the Sindelfingen plant starting summer 2026. The newly established Circus Defence division, focusing on autonomous supply systems for military use, is a particular area of investor interest, especially with a potential NATO certification that could open doors to multinational procurement.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Circus?
Financially, the company is navigating its growth phase. For the full year 2024, a period dedicated to research and development, Circus reported no revenue from its core technology and an EBITDA loss of approximately €11.9 million. Its forecast for 2026 projects revenue between €44 and €55 million with an expected EBITDA loss of €6 to €8 million, a significant improvement contingent on successful order conversion.
To fund expansion without immediate equity dilution, Circus entered a partnership with Finexity AG in March. They established a sale-and-leaseback model for six CA-1 units via the “Circus Robotics I” bond, a structure intended to be scaled to a volume in the tens of millions. The company is also examining a potential capital increase.
The upcoming quarterly call represents a clear inflection point. Management’s recent share purchases will either be seen as prescient positioning ahead of a commercial breakthrough or remain at odds with investor skepticism until concrete, monetizable progress is demonstrated.
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