In a stark reminder that Europe’s much-heralded defense spending surge is still subject to the unpredictable whims of politics and budgets, Germany’s abrupt cancellation of a flagship naval program has triggered fresh selling in European defense stocks, exposing the risks investors face even as NATO allies pledge record military outlays.
Rheinmetall, long seen as a prime beneficiary of the continent’s rearmament push, bore the brunt of the pain. Its shares fell 1% on Thursday after plunging 18% the previous day, as Berlin ditched plans for six large F126 frigates — a project potentially worth more than 12 billion euros in which Rheinmetall had been positioned as the lead contractor. Instead, the government will buy eight smaller Meko A-200 frigates from rival TKMS, citing delays, cost overruns, and contractor risks.
The decision sent ripples across the sector. German peers Hensoldt and Renk dropped 3.5% and 1.7% respectively, while most of Europe’s leading defense names traded in the red. Only Saab and Rolls-Royce managed modest gains of less than 1%.
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“This news reminds us that [governments] can and do change their minds,” JP Morgan analysts led by David Perry wrote on Wednesday, underscoring a central vulnerability in the defense investment thesis: customers are sovereign states whose priorities can shift with new leadership, fiscal pressures, or evolving threats.
For months, European defense stocks have ridden a wave of optimism fueled by NATO’s commitment to ramp up spending from 2% to 5% of GDP by 2025, driven by the war in Ukraine and broader security concerns. Yet Germany’s reversal on the F126 program highlights how even flagship initiatives can fall victim to cost overruns and changing strategic calculations. The shift to smaller, more agile frigates focused on anti-submarine warfare reflects a pragmatic reassessment of naval needs in the Baltic and North Sea, but it leaves contractors like Rheinmetall exposed.
Jefferies analysts cut their price target on Rheinmetall by 31% to 1,300 euros, reducing 2030 revenue expectations and noting that the market capitalization wiped out in Wednesday’s sell-off, over 10 billion euros, far exceeded the lost contract’s profit value.
“Restoring confidence will come through more credible targets,” they said. “Rheinmetall will face a difficult task to restore the credibility of its communications after this clear blow to its expectations of an imminent F126 order.”
Still, Jefferies maintained a Buy rating, arguing that the setback has at least derisked some overly optimistic assumptions. JP Morgan struck a similar tone, suggesting that losing the frigate contract might ultimately prove beneficial.
“Building warships is notoriously difficult,” the analysts noted, pointing out that the program’s complexity and risks could have created execution headaches for Rheinmetall down the line.
Implications for European Defense Spending
However, the episode raises uncomfortable questions about the reliability of Europe’s rearmament narrative. While political leaders across the continent have pledged massive increases in military budgets, partly in response to U.S. pressure under President Donald Trump, delivery often lags behind rhetoric. Investors are increasingly attuned to the gap between announced spending targets and actual procurement outcomes, especially as fiscal constraints bite in major economies like Germany and France.
Morningstar Chief Market Strategist Michael Field told CNBC this week that the market may be underestimating how long it will take for promised budgets to translate into sustained orders. In a decade, countries like Germany will likely still be restocking weapons donated to Ukraine, meaning defense spending is not a short-term cycle tied to one conflict but a multi-year structural shift.
“The market is missing that spending doesn’t depend on one war ending or starting,” Field said.
This reality is tempering enthusiasm for what had been one of the strongest performing sectors in European equities. While the long-term case for higher defense budgets remains intact, driven by NATO obligations, regional threats, and the need to reduce reliance on U.S. equipment, near-term volatility is rising as governments grapple with trade-offs between naval, land, air, drone, and space capabilities.
Silver Linings
For Rheinmetall, analysts believe the cancellation is painful but not catastrophic. The company’s core strengths lie in land vehicles, ammunition, and broader systems integration, areas where German spending commitments remain robust. Analysts expect it to continue winning significant orders in those domains over the next five-plus years, even if naval ambitions are scaled back.
The broader European defense sector also benefits from a fragmented but growing pipeline of opportunities. Countries are diversifying suppliers, investing in drones and advanced air defense, and pushing for greater intra-European collaboration to reduce costs and dependencies. The F126 decision itself indicates a pivot toward more practical, immediately deployable assets rather than ambitious, high-spec programs that risk delays.
However, the situation serves as a cautionary tale. Defense investing, unlike many other sectors, is inherently tied to sovereign decision-making, where political winds, budgetary realities, and shifting military doctrines can upend even the most carefully laid plans. As JP Morgan noted, the customer base is fundamentally different from typical corporate clients — governments can and do change priorities.



