Hensoldt shares declined 4.8% in today's trading, closing at €67.86, as the German defence electronics specialist extended a correction that has erased roughly a fifth of its market value over the past month. The stock is trading uncomfortably close to its 52-week low of €64.80.
The drop followed a sharp sell-off in Rheinmetall shares that was tied to a report saying Germany plans to scrap a delayed multibillion-euro project to build F126 frigates. That news added pressure across the European defence sector and contributed to a risk-off move among investors in defence-related equities.
Technically, the Hensoldt chart has been weakening for some time. The shares fell below their 100-day moving average in mid-June, and moving-average-based indicators are currently signalling a "Strong Sell". Those technical signals have been a persistent headwind for buyers, amplifying selling when negative sector or macro headlines emerge.
Management did register a visible sign of confidence when board member Oliver Dörre purchased shares on June 22 at prices between €67.98 and €69.50, a transaction that was disclosed the next day. Despite that insider purchase, selling pressure persisted. The fact that peer RENK Group also experienced a steep decline on the same day highlights that the move is sector-wide rather than being limited to company-specific problems.
Broader market conditions have compounded the stock's decline. The DAX fell by roughly 1% on Tuesday, with steep losses concentrated in technology and chip stocks. Infineon was among those that slid sharply, and Siemens Energy also registered heavy losses as investors wrestled with concerns about AI-related capital expenditure and rising expectations for Federal Reserve tightening. These broader equity moves have weighed on sentiment for cyclical and industrial names.
Germany's domestic data added to the negative backdrop. The country's private sector contracted for a third consecutive month in June, a development that underscores the fragility of Europe's largest economy and reduces investor appetite for cyclical industrials and defence-related contractors that are sensitive to public and private spending cycles.
In aggregate, the absence of a clear positive, company-specific catalyst, a technically broken chart, a weak macro backdrop in Germany, and broad risk-off selling across European equities have pushed Hensoldt to price levels not seen since late 2025. The shares currently trade at a steep discount to the analyst consensus price target of approximately €91.
What to watch next
- Any further sector headlines, particularly those related to the Rheinmetall F126 report, that could reverberate across defence suppliers.
- Technical developments around the 100-day moving average and whether the stock establishes a stable base above recent lows.
- German macro indicators and DAX performance, given their influence on investor risk appetite for cyclical industrial and defence names.