Vincorion IPO: 1,300-Engineer German Defense Supplier Eyes 2026 Frankfurt Debut Amid €200B EU Arms Surge
- Vincorion plans Frankfurt IPO by H1 2026 to fund hybrid power and air-defense growth.
- The 1,300-employee German supplier booked €340M revenue in 2023, 60% from NATO exports.
- EU military budgets jumped 21% in 2023 to €200B, creating a decade-long order backlog.
- Company supplies Leopard tank generators, Patriot microgrids, and short-range air-defense turrets.
- Listing will tap Germany’s €100B special defense fund and NATO’s 2%-of-GDP pledge.
Frankfurt expects its first major defense IPO since Rheinmettl’s 2019 spin-off as Berlin re-arms Europe’s largest economy.
VINCORION IPO—Vincorion, the Wedel-based maker of hybrid battlefield power systems, confirmed Friday it will seek a Frankfurt Stock Exchange listing in the first half of 2026, betting that record European defense budgets will translate into sustained double-digit order growth.
The company—whose generators keep Leopard 2 tanks and Patriot missile batteries running—has already hired Berenberg and Goldman Sachs to sound out institutional investors this autumn, according to people close to the process. A successful float would value the engineering group at roughly €1.2B and mark Germany’s first pure-play defense IPO since Rheinmetall spun off its automotive unit in 2019.
“We see a generational shift in public spending,” Chief Executive Stefan Stenzel told analysts on a private call. “Our pipeline has tripled since 2021.”
From Airbus Spin-off to €340M Defense Niche Player
Vincorion’s roots trace back to 1998 when Airbus parent EADS carved out its military auxiliary-power division in Wedel, near Hamburg. For two decades the unit quietly built aircraft generators and auxiliary power units (APUs) for the Eurofighter and A400M transport, generating steady but modest cash.
Everything changed in 2018 when private-equity firm Odewald & Comp. acquired 80% of what became Vincorion for an undisclosed sum. Under Odewald, headcount shrank from 1,600 to 1,300 while management pivoted from civil to defense applications. Revenue dipped to €290M in 2020 amid pandemic supply-chain chaos, then rebounded to €340M in 2023 as Berlin doubled tank deliveries to Ukraine.
Hybrid battlefield power becomes a growth market
Today 60% of sales come from NATO export programs, up from 35% in 2018. The company’s hybrid diesel-battery systems cut fuel consumption on forward operating bases by 30%, a metric that caught the attention of U.S. European Command. A $120M framework signed in 2023 covers microgrids for Patriot sites in Poland and Romania.
Operating margins have expanded from 6% in 2019 to an estimated 12% last year, helped by fixed-price contracts indexed to steel and copper. “We are essentially an energy company wearing a uniform,” quipped CFO Ina Schubert during a May capital-markets day.
The next chapter will depend on public-market capital: Vincorion needs €150M to tool a new 1 MW lithium-nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) battery line and €50M to certify its Skyranger 30 air-defense turret. Both projects are currently financed through Odewald’s shareholder loans carrying 9% coupons—expensive firepower in a rising-rate world.
Which Defense Segments Will Drive Vincorion’s Valuation?
Investors will price Vincorion against three distinct revenue buckets: mobile power systems (45% of 2023 sales), air-defense turrets (30%) and spare-parts services (25%). Each carries a different risk-return profile and comparable multiple.
Mobile hybrid generators enjoy a 35% CAGR in orders since 2021, propelled by NATO’s drive to cut fuel convoys—prime targets for Russian drones. Vincorion’s 15 kW to 150 kW units sell for €120k apiece with gross margins above 20%, outperforming traditional diesel competitors such as Jenoptik’s 75 kW line.
Air-defense turrets: small today, big tomorrow
The Skyranger 30, a 30mm remote-controlled cannon, is still in prototype phase yet already has €180M in signed pre-orders from Germany and Denmark. Management forecasts €400M annual revenue if NATO adopts the system as standard for the upcoming Leopard 3 platform. Comparable peers Rheinmetall and KNDS trade at 18-22× 2025E EBIT, implying a potential €720M valuation for this division alone.
Services, meanwhile, provide annuity cash: 10-year “power-by-the-hour” contracts yield €50M yearly revenue with 90% renewal rates. Investors typically award defense-service comps like MTU Aero Engines a 12× EBITDA multiple—lower than hardware but prized for predictability.
Add the parts, and equity analysts draft sum-of-the-valuation ranges between €1.1B and €1.4B, assuming 2025E EBITDA of €110M. The midpoint implies an enterprise-value/EBITDA of 11.3×, a 15% discount to Rheinmetall to reflect smaller scale and single-site risk.
How Germany’s €100B Special Fund Reshapes IPO Timing
Berlin’s €100B special defense fund—enshrined in the constitution in 2022—has become the single most important catalyst for German defense IPOs. The money must be committed by 2027 and spent by 2032, forcing the Bundeswehr to accelerate tenders.
Vincorion is already a beneficiary: in March 2024 it won a €90M hybrid-generator contract for the NATO airbase in Büchel, beating out France’s Safran. The deal carries a 30% advance payment clause, eliminating working-capital strain ahead of the float.
Parliamentary approvals synchronize with IPO window
Legally, parliament must approve individual tranches above €25M. The next voting block is scheduled for Q2 2026, coinciding with management’s desired listing window. “We want investors to see firm order momentum, not just promises,” CEO Stenzel said.
Bankers add another timing angle: the fund’s €40B remaining allocation creates a visible pipeline worth 2.5× Vincorion’s 2023 revenue, providing a narrative of multi-year growth even if broader European budgets stall.
Yet pressure is mounting. The Constitutional Court ruled that any uncommitted special-fund money reverts to the federal budget after 2027, compressing procurement timelines. Success in the IPO will hinge on convincing investors that Vincorion can scale production at Wedel fast enough to capture this one-off windfall.
Risk Factors: Single-Site Production and Battery Metal Prices
Despite bullish order books, Vincorion’s prospectus will have to confront two acute risk factors: 100% of production is concentrated on a 22-hectare campus near Hamburg, and 40% of bill-of-material costs hinge on nickel, cobalt and lithium carbonate prices that swung 60% in 2023.
Management has drafted mitigation plans, including a 2025 deal with Swedish battery maker Northvolt for fixed-price cells at €98/kWh—20% below spot—but the contract covers only 30% of anticipated 2026 demand.
Geopolitical tension around Taiwan’s silicon supply
Semiconductor content per generator has tripled since 2020 as digitized control systems replace analog relays. Taiwan’s UMC supplies the insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) modules; any escalation in the Taiwan Strait could halt Vincorion’s line within 12 weeks, according to a stress-test conducted with the Bundeswehr.
Labour is another chokepoint. The site needs 350 additional skilled machinists by 2026, yet regional unemployment is already 2.8%. IG-Metall union demands a 6% wage hike in 2025, threatening the 12% EBITDA margin target if productivity gains stay below 4%.
Investors will weigh these bottlenecks against the growth story. Bankers say the red-flag section is comparable to Renk’s 2023 IPO, which priced at the lower end of guidance after similar single-plant disclosures.
What Happens Next: Roadshow, Valuation, and Potential Cornerstones
With mandate banks in place, Vincorion will kick off formal pre-marketing at the Eurosatory defense fair in Paris this June, pitching to U.S. and European specialist funds. Early feedback suggests a price range of €28-€34 per share, translating into equity proceeds of €300-€400M for a 35% free float.
Cornerstone investors are expected to include Germany’s state-owned development bank KfW, which signaled it may take a 5% anchor stake to underscore Berlin’s commitment to re-shoring defense supply chains.
Anchor demand from Nordic pension funds
Swedish buffer fund AP2 and Norwegian insurer Storebrand have also requested allocations above €50M each, attracted by ESG-labelled defense narratives tied to energy efficiency. Their involvement would tighten the book-building window and potentially push pricing toward the upper end.
Management’s internal modeling assumes a 7% IPO discount to peer multiples, yielding net cash of €350M earmarked 60% for the NMC battery line and 40% for acquisitions, likely in ruggedized power-electronics startups in the €20-€40M revenue range.
If geopolitical risk escalates or battery prices spike again, bankers say the float could be downsized to 25% and re-filed in 2027. For now, the countdown is underway: auditors begin the IPO-ready audit in January 2025, with a prospectus expected by the following December.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What does Vincorion manufacture for defense clients?
Vincorion builds hybrid energy systems, microgrids, emergency diesel generators, weapon-stabilization drives, and short-range air-defense turrets used on Leopard tanks, Boxer IFVs, and Patriot missile batteries.
Q: When will Vincorion go public?
Management told investors the Frankfurt IPO is scheduled for completion in the first half of 2026; the exact share price range and free-float size will be disclosed after a 2025 audit.
Q: Why is European defense spending rising?
Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine pushed NATO to set a 2%-of-GDP floor; Germany alone created a €100B special fund, while the EU lifted its military-financing embargo for the first time since 1992.
Q: How big is Vincorion?
The Wedel-based company employs 1,300 engineers and generated €340M revenue in 2023—making it a mid-tier supplier between family-owned Hensoldt and listed peer Renk.

