Rheinmetall AG (ETR:RHM)
Germany flag Germany · Delayed Price · Currency is EUR
1,355.80
+17.80 (1.33%)
Apr 30, 2026, 5:37 PM CET
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Status Update

Jul 11, 2024

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Yeah. So due to popular demand, especially from our friends from ESMA, we have changed the format to an open call here for everyone. The call-in details are available or were made available to the public. We are not going to disclose any information which is not known to the public, which has not been released by any press release also prior. So I think we are here on a very compliant way. We have seen quite a bit of people during the second quarter, so people who have attended our conferences over the last three months should be familiar with our messaging.

We are going to be in quiet period from tomorrow on, with the call starting on August the eighth. Again, this will be available to the public via webcast. From the messaging, I think it is important to see that we are very well underway with the order intake in the second quarter, due to the German by maybe now signing contracts here in large numbers, especially the ammunition contracts and the load handling system contracts have been signed, so we will here have the strong increase in the second quarter.

We had the heavy weapon carrier, the vehicles in the second quarter, and we had some smaller ammunition pieces here. All in all, we would expect here order intake according to the Rheinmetall definition, including the frameworks above EUR 10 billion. We have here given a guidance for the second quarter, where we said that the second quarter will be more in line with the annual growth rate, after a growth of 15% in the second quarter, and the expectation that the full year will be around 40%. That should give you an indication how we are underway.

We have communicated during the second quarter that this is the way we think about the quarter, and that we are confident to be on track to meet the full year guidance for 2024. We have seen that we are now guiding the full year a little bit higher regarding the order intake momentum. Here, press releases have been shared where we have announced an order intake of up to EUR 40 billion, and that the backlog shall reach by the end of the year something about EUR 60 billion. Due to the strong momentum, especially from the Germans.

We have not made any specific communication around the profitability in the quarter. There have been calls around the question: How are we progressing with our capacity expansion? These are well underway, so we are quite successful in Unterlüss and in Wietze to bring our capacity on time and have them available to start with the ramp up in 2025 for the ammunition and the fuselage production in 2026. We have seen the small bore pistons transaction effectively closed as of April first. The announcement was in mid-April, but the effective date is first of April, so there is no further contribution here from the small bore pistons business.

It was not reported anyway, but during the full year, EPS and so on, we have not enough nothing left from that business. I would like to remind you that last year we had, in the second quarter, relatively easy comps in the civil business due to the slow production year after the cyber incident here, that should normalize in this year. However, overall growth rates here in the market have been relatively slow. We are not going to have any documents here uploaded. Here it will only be the spoken word. We have the second quarter here with the partiipation of Mr. Papperger and Mr., Ms.

Steinert, to give you an update on the market developments recently. If you have any questions now, I would be open for your Q&A. If there's any questions from your side, please raise your hand. Ben? Your line is open, Ben.

Speaker 4

Thanks, Dirk. Good morning. Is there any comments that you've made through the quarter on cash flow? And then I was just wondering a little bit around the breakdown between orders and nominations for some of the orders that you've announced, like heavy weapons carrier, and how we should think about what's framework, what's order intake in the quarter. Thank you.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

... Yeah. The order intake was driven obviously by the ammunition contract, which was a frame contract with first call off. The heavy weapon carrier is a fixed contract. The load handling system contract is a fixed contract. So there will be a good share of fixed orders in that, but the large contribution comes from the ammunition contract. The new truck order here was signed in Q3, so that will not be part of the Q2 order intake. We have not made any comments regarding cash flow.

We only reiterated that the German government has now started to change its procedure and provide here cash early in the contract so that we have support, especially now with the contract for the ammunition, so that we will have a prepayment that will allow to offset the CapEx for the Unterlüss plant and as well support here the initial working capital requirements. Regarding cash flow, the only comments that we have made is that we have started shipping the trucks from Austria to Germany. Majority of the sales will be happening in the third quarter, but we will have a first contribution here in the second quarter.

So, the load handling system contract will help to bring the working capital down, and finally, see here, the contribution to the top line.

Speaker 4

Is a 10% order, PDP, kind of, roughly a fair starting point to think about these German PDPs coming in?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Help me, what's PDP?

Speaker 4

Like, a pre-delivery payment.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

We have said that the German customer would start with 30%.

Speaker 4

Okay.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

The initial call offer is around EUR 1 billion, and we would see a prepayment here on that term.

Speaker 4

Okay, great. Thank you, Dirk.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

The next one is calling user 9. Calling user 9, you're now able to talk? Okay.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

Dirk, can you hear me? It's David Perry.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Yeah, David.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

Yeah. Hi, sorry. Just two clarifications, please. Sorry, you went quite quick. I think you said full year sales guidance is up 40, and we're on track for that. Should we infer from that, Q2, you were up 40%, which I think is what you were targeting on the Q1 call? Can I just clarify that, please?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

That would be here, the direction. Here we said that the Q2 top line development is in line with our guided annual growth rate.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

Okay, thanks. And then you said -- I think you said orders were over EUR 10 billion. I think you were referring to Q2. I mean, over EUR 10 billion could mean any number, really, but I thought it would be quite a bit higher than EUR 10 billion. I mean, if you include in that, the EUR 8.5 for the ammunition, then why not say EUR 13-15 billion or something? I just wanna understand how I should interpret over 10.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Well, the EUR 8.5 billion is the gross number, so you have always to get down to the net number. And here, the net effect of the German orders is something about above EUR 10 billion, but significantly lower than EUR 13 billion here. I do not know the smaller size numbers. I would expect something between EUR 10 billion-EUR 11 billion net effect.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

Okay. Now just to clarify, that's just for Q2?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

That is just the Q2 figure, yeah.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

All right. That, that's very helpful. Thank you. Thank you. So just... Sorry, and then just last one. So when you talk about the EUR 40 billion for the full year, is that gross or net?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

That should be net, net figure.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

All right. Thank you very much.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Okay, I don't see any further raised hands. So if there's no other question from your side... Oh. Alexander?

Speaker 5

Yeah. Hi, Dirk, thanks a lot for taking the question. I think you didn't say anything on EBIT or earnings generally. Maybe just on ecosystems, can you just remind us if there was expected any major contribution from ring swap agreements, part one? And second one is, I think in the first quarter, we saw some ramp-up costs in ammunition, which burdened earnings. I think the run rate for ramp-up costs will basically be the same in the second quarter compared to the first quarter, or should we think?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

... differently about that? The ramp up topic remains in place here. Ring swap agreements here we set in the Q1 period, that the first quarter had relatively low contribution from ring swap, and that they would come in the remainder of the year. So there is some additional ring swap contribution to be expected. Yeah.

David Perry
Analyst, Unknown

Okay, thanks.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Okay. Yeah. Wait a second. Christoph, your line is open.

Speaker 7

Hey, morning. Thanks for taking my question. One, just follow-up clarification on the prepayment you mentioned with regards to Germany. Is the implication now that you've already received it, or could there be a timing difference just between the order and the payment? I guess it can be a couple of weeks or so. And then I think Josefo said during the Q1 call that we should expect for the year with regards to earnings progression the usual seasonality. Now, if we take the usual seasonality, obviously it means the margins will fall in Q2. Did you discuss in the meetings or conference that you attended anything that would impact the usual seasonality, slightly positive or negative in Q2 with regards to earnings? If you could share some thoughts on that, would be great.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

There was no change to our earlier communication regarding seasonality.

Speaker 7

Thank you. And on the prepayment?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

We have not given the. The contracts were signed relatively late at the end of the quarter. So, I cannot confirm whether money was received by now.

Speaker 7

Thank you.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Okay. I have Sven and Sebastian. Sven, you're first.

Sven Weier
Analyst, Unknown

Yeah. Yeah, good morning.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Good morning, Sven.

Sven Weier
Analyst, Unknown

I hope you... Thanks for taking my question. The first one is just with regards to Italy, obviously important announcement, recently. I was just wondering if by now you can share a little bit more around the technicalities of that, in terms of, I guess, you're now going to develop a customized version for the Italian customer, and was just wondering when you think that's kind of ready to go, and when the actual order should be placed? That's the first one.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

There has been no further comments regarding here, the MOU, so we are currently preparing the MOU for the joint venture with Leonardo. The idea is that we have a 50/50 joint venture, which is going to be based in Italy. Here we have our Italian headquarters in Rome. The expectation is that we have similar to other international orders that we can provide a 60% localization localized work share with then Leonardo and Rheinmetall providing from Italy. The base for the joint venture is the technical platforms of Lynx and Panther, and then we have to see in due respect we can here integrate here Leonardo technology.

The joint venture is designed to create here a competitive platform that then can meet the demands of the Italian customer. But there is no contract yet signed.

Sven Weier
Analyst, Unknown

But the EUR 40 billion does include a little bit from Italy, I think, right? Like maybe a development contract or something. The EUR 40 billion guidance.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

We have said that we are expecting a tender until the end of the year. We did not say that the contract would be signed earlier. So regarding potential signing of the contract, I have no timeline or no new specifics on the timeline.

Sven Weier
Analyst, Unknown

The other question I had was just on the artillery contract, because I think there was also another deal awarded to Diehl and Nammo, which surprised me a little bit, given that your capacities are substantially larger. So, is there anything you can say regarding this contract and why your contract hasn't been bigger than it is?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Yeah, I cannot comment on competitors' contract here. What we can say is that we have capacity then by 2027, which is backed by contracts here. So we will have your not a capacity which is expecting to be filled with contracts, but we have here contracts which do support here the cash out for the CapEx and the working capital requirements and have a relatively quick payback. So relatively low risk profile for the ammunition.

Sven Weier
Analyst, Unknown

And the very last question, if I may: You already mentioned the VAT regarding the EUR 8.5 billion. Do we also have to subtract the EUR 1.2 billion you received last year already from this? Or is the 8.5 a top-up?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

... The EUR 8.5 includes the contract from last year. It was a top up to the full amount. We are not allowed to mention now the full volume. We gave an indication earlier. But the actual number is higher than we expected, but it includes the contract from last year.

Sven Weier
Analyst, Unknown

Okay, very clear. Thank you, Dirk.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Sebastian, you're next. I'll open your line. Sebastian, your line is open.

Speaker 5

Okay, thanks. I hope you can hear me. Good morning, everybody. First one is around the EUR 40 billion, or the up to EUR 40 billion. With the quarter one at EUR 4 billion, the second quarter now EUR 10 billion-EUR 11 billion, as you said before, there's EUR 25 billion left. Can you just walk us through the key building blocks? That's the first question. The second question I have is around the truck order, the slippage, the open EUR 4 billion from quarter four. Has that, in the meantime, been recovered, and, have you already started executing on that one in the second quarter?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Yeah, we have started to execute on that. So there is a smaller contribution here. We are currently shipping 20-25 trucks a day across the border to Karlsruhe. As I said, we have a small contribution in the second quarter, but the main contribution will be happening in Q3, and the contract stipulates that all deliveries shall be done until the end of November. We-

Speaker 5

If I may quickly follow up on this one, because I think there was a bit of a debate of renegotiating the terms of that very, very contract. So I would assume that the, the real profit chunk then comes into play with what you said, quarter four, so end of November, so, yeah.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Since most of the volume is happening in Q3, I would say that this is in line with the top line development.

Speaker 5

Okay. Mm-hmm.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Um, re-

Speaker 5

Building into, yeah.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Yeah, regarding the bigger pieces of the top line development, here we have from the German customer the already signed contract for the unprotected trucks. That is the first contribution which we had in the first week of July. Then we are expecting some other orders for tactical vehicles from the German customer here, the Marder successor vehicle, whether this is additional Pumas or whether this is a eight by eight Boxer Puho variants. We are expecting here most of the trends of the digitization orders coming through in the second half of this year.

We have a number of smaller, below EUR 1 billion, contracts here for the German customer waiting for this second half.

Speaker 5

Sorry, just to clarify, and lastly, on this one, I think you indicated on several occasions that Germany alone could be at around, I think, the lower bound of the old range, which was 28-36. Now you have raised that to 40. So what is really driving the delta then?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Delta, here we have international orders for air defense from various countries. We just signed contracts with Denmark, Hungary and Germany. At Eurosatory, we have signed or we are expecting to sign contracts for additional trucks in Canada, and we have a number of smaller contracts here across Europe.

Speaker 5

Okay, that's helpful. Thank you.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Okay, so next is Sash. Your line is open.

Speaker 6

Great. Thank you very much indeed. I wondered, Dirk, if you could just say what your comments are currently about the defense supply chain. You've clearly got an enormous ramp, particularly in ammunition, but by no means only there. And production ramps elsewhere, particularly in civil aerospace, have really suffered from a supply chain that's much weaker than probably most of us hoped. What do you see as being the key supply chain challenges at the moment, including either raw materials or subsystems?

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

I mean, the ultimate objective for Amital, for the ammunition, is to have a balanced supply chain here from the propulsion to the fuses. What we are needing here, as the key ingredients for the propulsion is, cotton linter and nitrous acid. Here, we have continued to communicate that we're building up working capital. Here we have now working capital three years for the 1.1 million rounds available. There is here a strategic discussion about a relocation of cotton linter production outside China. Until this has not been solved, we will continue to increase our safety stock for cotton linter.

Regarding the nitrous acid, we have managed to organize our supply chain around a diversified number of suppliers here in especially in Europe, so that we do not see any major impact from that. The other part is explosives. We are currently buying all TNT that we can get hold of in the market until we have our supply chain stable, balanced. We are currently not facing any major issues. We have all the products here in place for the tactical vehicles. However, we have not started to have major safety stock apart from the armored steel. It's simply not possible to manage here the high number of articles here.

So for the easier part, the ammunition that is managed for the tactical vehicles, we have only the armored steel here under or with higher safety stock. The third pocket is some optoelectronics, where we started as well to increase safety stock. We're currently not seeing any major issues for us in the market, which is not being managed by safety stock or diversification of the network.

Speaker 5

Thanks very much.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

I do not, Christoph. Christoph, your hand was raised?

Speaker 7

Sorry, it continued to be raised. I have no additional questions. Sorry.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Okay. So I do not have a raised hand on my screen. George, I saw your hand up earlier, but that has obviously been answered. Okay.

Speaker 5

Hi, yeah. Thanks for that. That was answered.

Dirk Winkels
Head of Investor Relations, Rheinmetall AG

Okay. So if there's no further question, I would thank you for your attention and close the call. That's not the case, so thank you, guys, and have a great day.

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