German defense supplier RENK posts best quarter in company history

Key Points
  • RENK Group recorded Q1 2026 order intake of approximately $657 million, the highest in company history for an opening quarter, with total backlog reaching a record $7.8 billion.
  • The Vehicle Mobility Solutions segment drove growth with a $177 million NATO tank contract and 188 Puma transmissions ordered, while RENK secured a USV propulsion package for a NATO state.

RENK Group AG recorded its highest-ever order intake for an opening quarter in company history, the German propulsion manufacturer announced on May 6, 2026, with approximately $657 million in new orders and a total backlog that has climbed to an all-time high of approximately $7.8 billion.

The Augsburg-based company posted first quarter 2026 revenue of approximately $320 million, up 4% from approximately $308 million in the same period last year, with adjusted EBIT growing at a faster rate than revenue, up 10.4% to approximately $47.9 million, pushing the adjusted EBIT margin to 15.0% from 14.1% a year earlier. The book-to-bill ratio of 2.1x means RENK is taking in more than twice as much in new orders as it is recognizing in revenue, a gap that feeds directly into the record backlog and provides the company with multi-year revenue visibility that most industrial manufacturers would envy.

“The successful start to 2026 underscores the strength of our business model and the ongoing positive momentum of our core markets. We achieved our highest order intake for an opening quarter in the history of RENK — clear proof of the ongoing high international demand for our products,” said Dr. Alexander Sagel, CEO of RENK Group AG, in the company’s press release.

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The Vehicle Mobility Solutions segment, which covers transmissions, suspension systems, and drive components for military ground vehicles, is doing the heavy lifting. VMS order intake surged 20.5% to approximately $540 million in the first quarter, producing a book-to-bill ratio of 2.5x and driving the majority of the group’s EBIT improvement. Adjusted EBIT in the VMS segment rose 22.3% to approximately $39.5 million, with margins expanding 1.7 percentage points to 18.3%.

Two specific programs anchored that performance: a approximately $177 million international main battle tank contract in the NATO environment, contractually agreed in the first quarter with initial deliveries scheduled for the end of the year, and additional orders under the Puma infantry fighting vehicle program, covering 188 transmissions along with corresponding suspension systems and final drives. Both deals reinforce RENK’s position as a system-level provider for military vehicle mobility rather than a components supplier, a distinction that matters for margin and for the depth of customer relationships that drive repeat business.

CFO Anja Mänz-Siebje highlighted the operating leverage dynamic that the numbers reflect. “There was clear operating leverage in first quarter of 2026. Our adjusted EBIT growth significantly exceeded revenue growth — which proves that scaling our production capacities has had a positive impact,” she said in the press release. “Our over 90% contractually guaranteed annual revenue provides a high level of planning security for the full year. The further increase in the total order backlog also secures long-term revenue visibility,” Mänz-Siebje added. That 90% contracted revenue figure is the kind of metric that separates a defense-focused industrial company from a purely commercial one — it means RENK enters each year with the vast majority of its planned revenue already locked into contracts, insulating the business from the demand volatility that affects companies dependent on discretionary purchasing.

The Marine and Industry segment had a more complicated quarter, with order intake declining 42.8% to approximately $79 million from an exceptionally strong prior-year comparable that included unusually large naval project orders. Revenue in the segment fell 10.8% to approximately $73.6 million, partly due to supply chain and logistics delays pushing deliveries into later quarters. Adjusted EBIT margin compressed to 6.7% from 10.2%, reflecting both the lower volume and one-time effects that RENK says did not affect the underlying business. The Slide Bearings segment saw modest declines across order intake, revenue, and profitability, with the margin decline attributable to a lower aftermarket share of business in the quarter and significantly higher U.S. tariffs compared to the prior-year period.

Beyond the quarterly financials, RENK used the earnings announcement to highlight progress on what it calls its NextGen Mobility agenda, covering unmanned systems on both land and sea. The company has received a commission to supply an integrated system package consisting of electric motors, couplings, and transmissions for an unmanned surface vessel for a NATO state, according to the press release.

The customer is not named, but the award extends RENK’s presence into the unmanned maritime market where demand has accelerated sharply following Ukraine’s demonstration of what armed surface drones can do to a conventional naval force. On the ground side, RENK will present a heavy unmanned ground vehicle showcase model developed with its partner Patria at Eurosatory 2026, centered on the drive-by-wire capable HSWL 076 transmission. RENK describes the HSWL 076 as a safety-certified drivetrain that forms the basis for scalable and platform-independent UGV concepts, positioning it as a potential propulsion standard for heavy unmanned ground platforms that multiple vehicle programs could adopt.

RENK confirmed its full-year 2026 guidance alongside the quarterly results, continuing to project revenue in excess of approximately $1.7 billion and adjusted EBIT of between approximately $288 million and $322 million. With a record backlog, a VMS segment running at a 2.5x book-to-bill, and two new unmanned systems programs announced in the same breath as the earnings, the company is making a clear argument that European defense spending is not a short-term budget spike but a structural shift that RENK’s order book is already reflecting in concrete numbers.

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