The defence electronics group has proven it can do more than build sensors — but the market is looking the other way. Hensoldt recently completed a full training programme for drone pilots under the Multinational Command Operative Führung in Ulm, covering both the civilian EASA Category A2 and the military Category IIa framework. The Luftfahrt-Bundesamt and the Luftfahrtamt der Bundeswehr both signed off on the examinations.
The company acted as a one-stop shop: training, exam administration and aviation certification all from a single provider. Participants were qualified to operate commercially available drones, a segment gaining rapid traction within the Bundeswehr. The project fits neatly into Hensoldt’s broader strategy of wrapping its core sensor business — radar, optronics and electronics — with service and software offerings. Drones need not just hardware but skilled operators, and delivering both helps lock in long-term contracts.
Revenue for 2025 came in at roughly €2.5 billion, providing a solid foundation for this service expansion. Yet the stock tells a different story. On Friday, shares tumbled nearly six percent to close at €73.32, pushing the seven-day decline past ten percent. The price now sits more than 36 percent below its 52-week high of €115.10 and has fallen beneath all relevant moving averages.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Hensoldt?
The relative strength index at around 52 signals neither clear overbought nor oversold conditions, suggesting the sell-off stems from broad pressure on the defence sector rather than technical extremes. The 52-week low of €62.75, set in late April 2025, remains the key support level to watch.
Another data point showed the stock closing at €72.72, with the weekly loss approaching eleven percent as the gap to the 200-day moving average widened. Volatility has defined trading in recent months, as high expectations for order intake collide with the urgent need to scale production capacity for existing contracts. The shares still show a double-digit gain over twelve months, but all gains since the start of the year have evaporated.
Investors will get fresh fundamental cues in May. The company is due to publish first-quarter results on 6 May, followed by the virtual annual general meeting on 22 May. At the AGM, management is expected to detail the next steps for capacity expansion and the integration of the services business.
Ad
Hensoldt Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Hensoldt Analysis from April 25 delivers the answer:
The latest Hensoldt figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Hensoldt investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from April 25.
Hensoldt: Buy or sell? Read more here...











