Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Q2 2025 report conference call. I am Sandra, the course call operator. I would like to remind you that all participants have been listened to in the mode and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a Q&A session. You can register for questions at any time by pressing star and one on your telephone. For operator assistance, please press star and zero. The conference must not be recorded for publication or broadcast. At this time, it's my pleasure to hand over to Armin Papperger, CEO. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you very much. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you very much for joining us today. With me on the call is my colleague, our CFO, Klaus Neumann, who will guide you through the financials. Before we start, please be reminded of our disclaimer on page number two. Ladies and gentlemen, please have a view to slide number three. On slide number three, you see that on the sales side for the quarter, and we always told that the Q2 because also of the election delays, but also, and I will give you in details more, that we are reducing a little bit the speed if you compare it with Q1.
We have in Q2 on the defense side a growth of 13%, and I focus a lot on the defense side because, as you know, we had made a strategic decision that at the end of the day, the civilian business we will take out of that. I think in Q4, we will also find out if it is possible to take it from the head. In the first quarter, we had on the defense a growth. In the first half year, we have a growth of 36%, and we had EUR 600 million goods which were ready. EUR 300 million on the truck side. We signed last week this contract, so there was a delay of some weeks. It was impossible to do it on the top line. We had also EUR 300 million on the ammunition side.
If we would be able, the growth rate would be a level of nearly 60%. We are ready with that product, and that is the reason that we are still convinced that everything in this year is growing into the right direction. The second point is the operating results. On the operating results, we have because we missed EUR 600 million sales, which are very profitable. If you compare on this EUR 600 million, it would be between EUR 120 million and EUR 150 million extra profit. We would have an extraordinarily good result if we go what we have ready goods in our stocks. The operating result is now EUR 276 million, which is + 2% in the group. Operating margin is on a level of 11.3%, which is, as I said before, operationally much better than we can show you in the first half year. Very positive also is applications.
We have more than 150,000 applications. A lot of people who want to join Rheinmetall. The operational free cash flow is with - EUR 911 million. It's not as a good number that we had last year, and it's also very clear. The reason for that is the German government could not give us down payments because there was a delay of six months at the moment in the negotiations about that. Q3, Q4, and especially then also because you cannot really guide every quarter. The first quarter in the next year will be huge, we will get huge order intakes and also then down payments about that.
CapEx with 8.2% is on a high level, but this is also very important because with all the contracts we have and we expect, and you know, the Minister of Defense in Germany especially says, but also other European Ministers of Defense tell us we must accelerate, we must be faster. On the Rheinmetall nomination, we are in the first half year nearly on the same level as we were last year, but in the quarter, we had EUR 2.6 billion. The reason again is no decisions from Germany because of election. Rheinmetall backlog is at EUR 63 billion, + 30%, so we are in good shape in that way. What is the, how do we see the future, and what are the next months or the next quarters? You know there are new NATO targets, and this is what you see on slide number four.
From 2% in 2024 up to 2035, there is a target now of 3.5% of core defense spendings and related infrastructure spendings is 1.5%. If you only focus on the 3.5%, it's a huge booster for the business, and this is exactly what we will see over the next quarters. Our idea is to show you because you really, there is at the moment not enough capacity in Bayern BW, especially in Germany, to bring all these contracts into the line. We need a little bit more time, and we have to look also at the first and the second quarter last year. If you look now on slide number five, here we gave you an overview about the Rheinmetall nominations and the potential.
As we discussed last quarter, the indication is coming also from the Ministry of Defense that a lot of the nominations will change into really fixed contracts. In the first half of 2025, we booked in between EUR 13.7 billion, so nearly EUR 14 billion. On the vehicle side for the next period in 2025 and middle to 2026, we see that Leopard 2, there is a huge need, Puma, Boxer, heavy weapon carrier, Caracal support vehicles, but also how it's self-propelled, how it's RCH, etc., etc. There is a potential for Rheinmetall between EUR 30 billion and EUR 35 billion, and I think that we can grab most of the things. Last time you asked me the question, what are the competitions about that things, and in Leopard, Puma, Boxer, etc., there are no competitions because there are no other producers. We do that together with our friends from Munich.
Second point, weapon and ammunition. On the weapon and ammunition side, we see a potential between EUR 10 billion and EUR 15 billion. There is loitering ammunition, medium caliber, a huge contract about medium caliber 155 SMArt ammunition. This is the ammunition which has the sticker heads to fight against the main battle tanks and also another contract on the 120 millimeter. On the electronic solutions side, there are Skyr anger. This is one opportunity between EUR 6 billion and EUR 8 billion. Another opportunity came up now Friday last week. This is also on TaWAN side. There is a need to double the contract on TaWAN. As you know, there was around EUR 8 billion. It seems to be that it can go up to EUR 16 billion, to double that. This is not in that list.
Links on medium caliber powder plants, Boxer, and a lot of different other things is at the moment on the international side for EUR 13 billion - EUR 15 billion is what we see. You see the flags from Italy to Romania, Lithuania, Latvia, etc., etc. Bulgaria is the newest thing that we go forward. We think that we can make everything happen over the next 12 months. In total, we see that from 2025, so this year, the second half of this year and the first half of 2026. We give you that information because of this six-month delay of the German election. Germany is a driver at the moment for the national, but also for the international business here in Europe that we have an opportunity of more than EUR 80 billion in order intake.
The next slide is showing you the strategic partnerships or the M&A activities that we made in between. I will start with CAD Malaysia. This is a production line in Malaysia for electronics. We had a minority shareholdership, and we have now the majority of CAD in Malaysia, a production area where we can produce electronic components for a fair value. BlackNet is for the digitization, a very important company where we took over the majority. Hagedorn, this is where we are able to produce up to 3,500 tons of nitrocellulose. Tick in a box, it's ready. Now, the Lockheed Martin joint venture is we are nearby for signing. The same is for ICEYE and also the cooperation with Indra.
Leichtwerk is an investment that we made in North Germany, about Braunschweig, where we have a drone factory where a lot of specialists for drones are there, where we want to produce and develop new drone technologies. Reliance Defense is our cooperation that we have in India with the Reliance Company. Resonant Holding is South Africa. It's also a tick in the box. It's all done. This is our partner now and our company now who is able to build up chemical plants. The same thing we do on artillery plants, for example, we can do now on chemical plants. On chemical plants, we need now for sure it's nitrocellulose, it's nitroglycerin, nitroglycerin, but also ammonium perchloride and other things that we will build by ourselves. As we always discuss, we want to do it internally and we want to have a vertical integration in this area.
Vehicle defense vehicles, we made a very clear decision also with Leonardo because of the process, because the growth process must be very fast, that we need some time to take out the truck business from the normal vehicle defense business. Leonardo took over the whole business and we are at the moment in negotiation to take over at the end of the day the truck business in Italy. On the naval equipment side, you have seen now the first information about that. We want to go more into the component side and you see that the underwater technology is one of the things where we are investing and where we create at the moment also partnerships. So far, from the market side, a small overview about that and I'm happy to take over to Klaus. He will give you an overview about the financials.
Thank you, Armin. Let me start with an overview on our group's KPIs. As Armin mentioned, we delivered a good set of results within overall expectations. Some momentum, as Armin mentioned, was lost due to a pull forward effect into Q1 and also delays in the call-off of our trucks in Germany. Sales will only start in Q3 rather than in June, as it happened in 2024. As a result, group sales grew 9% to EUR 2.4 billion, of which around EUR 1.9 billion are defense-related. The M&A impact includes EUR 115 million from Lock Performance, our acquisition at the end of 2024 in the U.S. All three defense segments delivered good results, but group overall result was held back by further decline in the civil business, which also included transformational costs. Overall, group operating result increased to EUR 276 million.
As a result, group margin moved to 11.3%, supported by a 13.2% margin in defense. Moving on to the next page. Vehicle systems sales increased to EUR 945 million, mainly driven by ramp-up in the production of tactical vehicles, where the performance, as mentioned in the logistical vehicles, was held back as a big call-off from the existing frame contract was only placed earlier this month. It is important to note that all the vehicles that we are going to deliver in Q3 and Q4 have already been produced. As a result, a slightly favorable mix effect increased the operating margin to 10.3%. Weapons and ammunition sales grew by 5% to EUR 724 million, driven by a 150-millimeter order from a NATO country and an increased amount of tank ammunition. This development came despite the already communicated pull forward effects into the first quarter.
Sales in the first half of 2025 increased overall by 26%. The operating margin increased by 0.7% points to 22.7% in the second quarter due to a favorable leverage effect. Moving on to electronic solutions. That division showed the strongest sales growth within all defense segments. It grew by 44% to EUR 570 million, mainly driven by the delivery of intercom sets, TaWAN ramp-up, and the delivery of air defense systems to European customers. Operating margin was affected by ramp-up costs for the F-35 production here near Düsseldorf, and as a result, the margin declined to 8.6%. The power systems sales development is with - 6%, again below previous year's level, mainly due to the weak market environment. The low production volume environment and transformational cost were the reasons for the decline of the operating margin to 3.0%. Let's turn to page number 10.
As expected, the latest government information in Germany in May and the June NATO summit resulted in cautious order placement by our customers. Several orders, like the call-off by Germany for our trucks, have been postponed into the second half and, as communicated, have now been placed. Weapons and ammunition account for almost half of the EUR 2.6 billion Rheinmetall nomination. Most orders across all segments were of a relatively smaller size and compared to a strong previous year quarter that was driven by the signing of the large frame contracts for artillery ammunition, the heavy weapon carrier contract, and BLS trucks for Germany. Due to a strong first quarter for electronic solutions, this segment shows the biggest increase in the Rheinmetall backlog compared to the previous year, followed by ramp-up ammunition and vehicle systems. In total, Rheinmetall backlog increased by 30% to EUR 63.2 billion year- over- year.
Let's flip to page number 11 for a detailed look into our operating free cash flow. The low order intake goes hand in hand with low levels of customer prepayments, as mentioned, which was one of the reasons for the negative operating free cash flow development in the second quarter. The further buildup of operating working capital added to this development. One of the buildups is also, as mentioned, the increased stock of trucks that are ready to be delivered to our German customers. Lastly, CapEx spend for our new capacities was an additional reason for the negative trend in operating free cash flow, which is expected to revert towards the end of this year. Please turn to page number 12. I would like to give you a brief overview of the latest developments in our balance sheet.
The first convertible bond series was issued in 2023, is now fully converted. Series B is approximately 50% converted. As a result, total numbers of shares are almost 56 million pieces. This helped to increase our equity ratio to 33.7%. The conversion of the convertible bonds will have a favorable effect on our interest payments already this year and, of course, also in the following years when the full-year effect for Series A will be realized. In the absence of material customer prepayments and the accelerated investment in inventories and equipment, our net financial position decreased slightly year- over- year. This closes my presentation, and I hand over to Armin for the outlook.
Thanks, Klaus. Slide number 14 is taking you through what happens at the moment on the power system transformation. We are well on track. The plant conversion of defense in Berlin is finished on July 1st. Weapon and ammunition takes over the Berlin plant. Where we produce automotive components, we will produce now components for defense, especially for ammunition, inert ammunition components in Berlin. Noise is still ongoing, but we are on a very good way. We will have, let me say, a final organization this year. What we want to build up is air defense capacities. We will build a Rheinmetall air defense Germany because of these huge contracts that will come from the German side. Current technology, vehicle technology, protection technology, but also satellites. As you know, we have this cooperation with satellite producers.
We are looking also for other sites, and we are very fast if we do it that way because then we have the factories. The investment is much smaller than if we build up a new factory. That is the reason that Hungary and Italy, we are looking at also at factories in Hungary and Italy, especially in Szeged in the south of Hungary and in Italy, in the central part of Italy, to create a hybrid factory where we have civilian products and where we have then also defense products. M&A process. We are in competitive negotiations in different areas. We have currently talks with several interested parties to sell our civilian business. We are aiming for a decision by the end of this year. We hope that at least middle of next year, we can have a closing of that deal. Let's have a look to slide 15.
The two biggest constructions, there are a lot of constructions that we have, are completed in record time. We will have now the ground opening in Q3 of the plant Niedersachsen in Unterlüß, where we have the maximum capacity of 350,000 rounds. As discussed last time, the forging capacity is 500,000 and the lapping capacity maximum 350,000. We will produce, this is our target, 20,000 this year. We have a ramp-up curve for next year so that in the year 2027, we will be able to produce a full capacity of nearly 350,000 rounds. The second point is the fuselage plant in Weeze in Northern Westphalia. Here with manufacturing readiness, we started some weeks ago with the production of the first fuselage. We will have the ground opening in September this year. We are also in time. After 16 months, we are able to start the production.
If you have a look to page 16, we have pronounced seasonality persists. We focus on Q4. We will be backloaded. We want it to be better, again, and this is very, very important, we had some weeks' delay on this truck contract so that we are not able to make these EUR 300 million sales in Q2. This will be now, we will do this now in Q3 and some of them also in Q4. Why? Because there is a limited capacity in Karlsruhe where they can take over the trucks. Per week, there is a limited number they can take over, but we deliver, everything is ready, and we deliver week by week now the trucks till the end of the year. We've signed this around EUR 750 million on trucks, and we are able to deliver everything this year.
We have a very high confidence for a strong order intake of Q4 and also for strong sales. Rheinmetall backlog expected to raise this year beyond EUR 80 billion, but if you count everything up in the middle of next year, if everything is running well and we think we are on a very good way, we could have a backlog of EUR 120 billion. The sales on defense will be + 35% to + 40%. As I told you before, we would be in this range also for the first half if we could deliver the ready goods that we have in stocks. We will have a flat business on the civilian business, which is not long a core business about that. We said we will have an operating margin of minimum 15.5% as a group, coming around 19% on the defense side and a cash conversion rate of more than 40%.
Thank you very much for your attention, and we are ready now for Q&A.
We will now begin the question- and- answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on the telephone. You will hear a tone to confirm that you have entered the queue. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to disable the loudspeaker mode while asking a question. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to two questions. Anyone who has a question may press star and one at this time. Our first question comes from Sebastian Growe from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, Mr. Papperger, Mr. Neumann. I have two questions which are around the demand and order pipeline. From the chart there on slide five, you mentioned an order pipeline of more than EUR 80 billion until the end of H1 2026. The first part of the question is related to how would this number compare to the previously disclosed target, which was more than EUR 55 billion in 2025, and how might then the mentioned German spending boost impact your pipeline going forward? This applies both for 2026 and especially also beyond 2026. Do you still consider the capture rate of the German procurement budget of 50% that you once mentioned on prior calls? Is it still a realistic target? I would stop there.
Yeah. First of all, the expectation and the numbers that we expected six months ago are now, let me say, higher than what we expected six months ago. We will no longer speak about, and this is a point, this is an agreement that we have with the government, and this is something to do also with security levels about numbers of vehicles. I think the figures are very, very high and higher than we expected on everything, on main battle tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, and also on the 8x8 and other vehicle sides. Expectation is high. There are two things that we have an overview at the moment, from now to 2029 and from 2029 - 2035. These are the two periods that the government is planning. We will get in details over the next months a perfect overview about all the delivery rates up to 2035.
A very, very safe thing. This is number one. The second point is that, and this is a discussion we had also beginning of that week with the Ministry of Defense, that we will have no cash issues because there is cash enough at the moment, especially in Germany, and the down payments will be good. We are at the moment in negotiation how the rules and regulations of the down payments are coming up, and these down payments will be very positive for us for the next years. The trend is also the next point, how long, let me say, will it work? As I said, especially on the German side, we will have a very clear picture up to 2035, for 10 years. On the international business, in some areas, it is longer than 10 years.
If you see to Italy, we speak about 15 years where they are going forward. I think we can, we will have over the next six months a very, very clear picture about that, what happens over the next 10- 15 years.
That's very helpful. Absolutely. If I may take you up on the comment you made around the down payments. On prior occasions, we also discussed that the frame backlog might well be converted and that the largest part of that is Germany currently. How should we square that then? The conversion on the one side and the potential, yeah, booster, I think, around down payments is fair to say on the other side.
What we do at the moment is really to find, because as you see, all these nomination letters from the defense side we got at the moment, all of them, yes, are more than fulfilled. Mostly, if you have a frame contract, it will happen that, and this is by law possible, they overrun this stuff by 50%. If we had a EUR 5 billion frame contract that we expect over the next years, because there is such a big need, and this is what you see, what the Minister and the Chancellor say, or especially on the German side, that if there is a EUR 5 billion nomination letter at the moment or frame contract, we expect that EUR 7.5 billion will come up. We count at the moment that the frame contracts will be enlarged and then changed into fixed contracts.
The point is what we have to do, and this is what the financial guys from our side and the Ministry of Defense are doing at the moment, is not to overpace also the down payments. If you get all the down payments in one slide, you have too much money at the end of the day. What we want to do is we want to finance our investments, to have a good operational free cash flow, but not, let me say, to eat all the potatoes in the first week. We need to have it. We need also a lot of food over the next years and also a good cash management in that way. I think at the moment, the flexibility of the government is very, very high. What I hear at the moment, especially from the German government, is that, okay, please tell us what you need.
Tell us what you want. Money there. We can guide, let me say, the way where we want to go. I'm on a, it's very convenient for us.
Indeed it is. Thank you so much for the color. Lastly, I'm going to quickly go back to my first question, the 50% question. Is it a number that you still feel comfortable with after everything that you have been seeing and discussing?
We are going on a good way at the moment. I cannot 100% say whether it is 45%, 55% about that, but I think around that. I'm still convinced that we are able to catch a big part of these orders that the German government will give. 100%.
Thank you very much, Mr. Papperger.
A pleasure.
The next question comes from Alessandro Pozzi from Mediobanca. Please go ahead.
Hi there. Thank you for taking my questions. I have two. I believe in the opening remarks, you mentioned you talked about the TaWAN contract that potentially could double. I was wondering if you can give us a bit more color around that. The second question is, over the last few quarters, I would say you've substantially expanded the number of partnerships with Lockheed Martin, Anduril, Reliance Defense, and potentially Naval as well. Maybe can you talk about the last two partnerships with Reliance Defense and Anduril in terms of upside? Also, where do you think is the line between the trade-off in terms of expanding your product portfolio and maintaining focus on execution? Thank you.
Yeah, let's start, Alessandro, with TaWAN. On the TaWAN side, this is the information we got over the last two weeks that the need, and this is also very clear. The fleet is growing strong. Especially Germany is looking for a lot of new vehicles and much more than we expected some months ago. If we have more vehicles and if we try to get also more people, new brigades, you need also more electronics and you need more communication. That is the reason that there is a potential at the moment to double the need on the TaWAN side to have the communication from the front line to 500 km, let me say, into the back. The second point is also, and this is what I told also, to have better and more satellite communication. Yes.
We are also now on the way, especially on the LEO satellites, and that is the reason that we are investing in that point, that we will not only build the building of the satellites for us, it's a door opener, but to have to be a service company also. This is part of our digitization strategy. This will also grow and this will also, or it could be part, let me say, on top on TaWAN. The second point is that, or the third point is that the cooperations with Lockheed Martin are running into the right direction. As you know, we are in discussions with this missile production, and I think we will have the first success this year. The production line of rocket motors and missiles in the north of Germany is on a very good way.
The reason for that is that we got green lights and permissions for these factories. We are now in 12 months ready. In 12 months' time, we will have all the mixers, all the curing stations, etc., etc., to be able to create 5,000 rocket motors. Anduril is a partnership in different areas. We check different softwares if we can implement softwares. What we do is we are checking also, let me say, long-range missile technologies, but totally different technologies than on the Lockheed Martin side because Anduril has, let me say, very cheap versions. What we want to do is we want to go into the maximum technology version, which will be for sure a Lockheed Martin version, and then the Anduril version where we have cheaper missile versions. In the unmanned plane side, we have a look at the moment to all partners.
There is Anduril, there is Lockheed Martin, but there is also Boeing who is taking care about that thing. We take care of what the German government wants. The advantage that we have is that these unmanned planes have to act with the F-35. On the F-35 side, we have a lot of technologies of F-35, and we have especially the IT infrastructure to handle restricted data from the U.S. government. Nobody has that at the moment. We are the only ones who are able to do it because on the fuselage of the F-35, yes, it's a very restricted area from the U.S. government. I think this will help us a lot to be a good partner for the German government and to handle a U.S. IT structure and especially restricted IT structures.
On the naval side, we are at the moment in some negotiations with partners, and I hope that we can give you as an investor over the next five, six, maybe seven weeks, an overview about what we are doing. We are in non-disclosures in this area, but we think we are able to create really a big business also on the naval side, and we will make investments. This is at the moment our target on the naval side to invest in this area to enlarge our product portfolio. Missiles is enlarging of the product portfolio, naval side is enlarging of the product portfolio, and the artificial intelligence cooperations is it. We don't only do it with Lockheed Martin, with Anduril. We speak with Deutsche Telekom about that thing on the satellite side, on the artificial intelligence side.
We speak with a lot of digital providers in this area because we think we could be a good interface manager on the defense side. Is that good for you, Alessandro?
Yeah, it's very clear. I think your product portfolio is getting quite big, and I guess you have to prioritize management time, but also financial resources. I was wondering how you prioritize that.
Yeah. So it's a very clear thing what we do. The biggest investment at the moment is going into the ammunition side and also into the missile side. Huge investments on building up the capacity of energetic, so of powder, of AudiX, of SPX, and this is a strong thing, and of production of ammunition. In ammunition, there are missiles and artillery where we at the moment focus because we think and we know that up to in some areas like powders, we are fully booked up to 2033 in between. This is a point where we need more capacities. The second point is we have to take care about the vehicle production on the vehicle side. The investments are not as big as in the energetics because in the energetics is our very clear strategy that we have a vertical integration.
In this vertical integration, we invest at the moment in nitroglycerin, in other things, but also we will make investments in AP as well as ammonium perchloride because we want to have a vertical integration also on the missile, on the rocket motors. Vehicles, coming back to that, we make optimization. Automated welding shops, automated chassis production, and also helping on the robot side, on the turret production, etc. This is the next point. If you see the factory that we implemented in Unterlüß, it's unbelievable. There is a nearly manless factory. We can drive ghost shifts where the third shift is only, let me say, with 2-3 people, with two technicians who take care of the robots and the optimized side. This is where we do that investment.
Our investment level on the CapEx will be on a level at the moment of 8%, which is we can guide that very clearly with the down payments. As I told you, the governments are very flexible with the down payments, so it will not hurt us. The return of investment is of all that investment is mostly less than three years. It's not a big risk. In some areas, it's less than two years. This is a very good investment also, and we are not suffering in that area. Now the missiles are coming, and on the missile side, the investments are not as big. The reason for that is also that we are not investing in R&D. We are not investing in 10-year R&D programs to say, "Okay, we want to do, we want to cooperate." That's the reason that we make these joint ventures.
This joint venture with Lockheed Martin, for example, gives us a good opportunity with less spendings to make very fast business, as an example. We make a risk analysis for every product group, and for sure, we don't overspend the point, and we don't want to overspend. We take care about our resources.
Thank you very much for the answer. I'll turn it back.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Sven Weier from UBS. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. The first one, Mr. Papperger, is kind of circling back to our previous discussions we had on kind of the mid and long-term sales potential. I think last time we spoke, you pointed to kind of a 2030 sales vision of EUR 40 billion -EUR 50 billion. I think you were confident to grow the defense business also like the 20% clip thereafter. I mean, now you talked about getting sales visibility from the German government until 2035, Italy even longer. Do you want to give us an update how you feel about this after what has happened in the last two months? That's the first one. Thank you.
Yeah. I stay with the expectation we had. I stay on that level. There is really the potential to grow up in this area. This is what we said. I stay on that in 2027. This is the outlook that we gave. We will be between 20. There is an opportunity to grow up to 20 - 25, and 40 - 50 is in 2030. Is that what we say? There will be also some M&A activities in between. What you count is, and this is our target. At the end of the day, we want to buy every, and we have to buy, let me say, to enlarge our product portfolio, but also to deepen the vertical integration in some areas.
Every year, a company, and I expect that we are able to buy every year a company who makes around one or a little bit more than EUR 1 billion sales. If you count that up, then at the end of the day, between now and 2030, there are also EUR 6 billion, EUR 7 billion only with coming out of M&A. This is our target.
Beyond 2030, is that still something you're confident with to continue to grow the defense business at a double-digit rate?
If you, I'm very clear at the moment, as I said, we will be very clear up to 2030- 2035 after booking these points because then a 10-year period, especially from the German side. From the international side, I think we get not such a good overview, but I'm very convinced that we are able to grow further because we have the contracts.
Yeah, I guess by the time of the CMD, you probably know more about this. We'll come back to that. The second question I had was just maybe following up also a little bit on what Sebastian asked at the beginning on the kind of longer-term pipeline beyond the next 12 months. I wanted to speak to you about specifically, obviously, about the drone decision from the German government. It seems that Airbus is in the race, Helsing is in the race, and you guys are in the race. What do you think is your edge over those two other groups in what you can potentially offer?
Yeah. As I said, we are at the moment in discussions with these three main partners. These partners are Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Anduril. We have not, let me say, a development version to say, "Okay, we won't develop ourselves." What we do is, as you know, Boeing at the moment is flying in Australia. The Americans, this is a black program that we have, is connected with the F-35 program. At the end of the day, we speak about 400 unmanned vehicles that the Germans need in that area. Yeah. If you count up what is that, that's a huge business. We think that the running programs and the companies who have developed over the last 15 years, so like a company like Lockheed Martin has technology, let me say, a huge opportunity. Other companies are starting now within the R&D phase. They are starting now with PowerPoint work.
I think at the end of the day, and this is what I hear from the Ministry of Defense, you have to make it happen. A lot of people are always discussing to say, "Okay, yes, we can do this. We can do that." You remember last time we discussed about new powder technologies, blah, blah, blah, blah, which are coming up. You have to deliver. You have to deliver fast. I think we are able to deliver fast. The USP time is one thing where we think that we are not bad.
Lastly, also circling back to the pipeline a bit on Ukraine and the ammunition contract, what's the current status there? Is that all influenced by the geopolitics and whether the U.S. wants this or not, or how should we think about this contract?
As you know, the first contract from the Ukrainian side is signed. I'm at the moment not happy with the speed that we have on the Ukrainian side, also because you know that there is a new factory that we build up. We started in Ukraine on the same level or nearly the same time that we started in Germany. In Germany, we are ready, and in Ukraine, we are not ready. The bureaucracy in Ukraine is unfortunately very, very high. I'm not happy about that. They want to double the capacity now on factory number one. This is the good thing of the story. The other thing is still that they want to go forward with higher numbers, but at the moment, there is missing money.
Very clear. Thank you very much, Mr. Papperger.
Pleasure.
The next question comes from Christoph Laskawi from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. The first block would be just coming back to the prepayments on the order potential. I think you flagged before that the prepayment was roughly 20-30% of the order value. Considering the pipeline that is from Germany, that could be quite substantial this year and next year. You also commented that you don't want to get too much. The implication would be, if I take that correctly, that the share is likely coming down and you manage it a bit. Linked to that, what do you think is the share of money you need for CapEx requirements to build the capacity? What do you need in order to get the supply chain ready, right? Financing your suppliers, getting their capacity ready.
Another question linked to cash and also M&A and capacity would be, if you buy the Iveco truck business, would you still look at VW's Osnabrück plant either in contract manufacturing or to produce, or is that then essentially gone? The last question, if I may, just on your Q3 indications you gave on the slides, is it fair to assume that Q3 top line-wise would be a slower quarter versus the target run rate for the full year? Should we read that into the segment? Thank you.
Yeah. First of all, on the prepayment side, I think it's a very important thing that at the end of the day, we guide a little bit at that point because it's a very nice and it's a great story and it's also a great story for you as investors if you say, "Okay, we have one quarter where we have, whatever, some billion down payments." You cannot have this in every quarter and we don't need all that money and we are not a bank, so which is doing going forward. That is the reason that our financial guys at the moment take care about that, that we are always positive. It makes also not a lot of sense to get all the money, let me say, on one pile.
Over the next five quarters, there is money missing and you as investors said, and also, hey, you had a great cash conversion rate of some 100% on one day, but in the next quarter, then you are negative. At the end of the day, we want to do it, that it is good for the customer and it is good for us and it is good for the shareholder. This is one thing where we try to find at the moment the best way. The other thing is what is also very important. If you have 20% - 30% down payments and if you have a 10-year contract, for example, to go forward, we speak about huge figures, huge figures. This is a point what we have to handle.
I think a good idea would be at the moment to get down payments for two, three years and then to have the next slide to go forward, to mix it a little bit at the end of the day. Also not to make the team lazy, but because, let me say, if you swim in money, at the end of the day, the team should not be lazy. They should fight also for all that thing. That is, let me say, it's not easy, but on the other thing, it's a better situation that we have at the moment than some years ago where no down payment and no other things were possible. Second point is on the Iveco side.
On the Iveco side, we at the moment, and this is a common target that we have with Leonardo, that at least, let me say, end of this year, at least at March next year, we will have a solution. There must be a cut-out process of this, and we have to know which machine is working for trucks, which machine is working for tactical vehicles. This is the job that we have to do now. Most of the jobs we have to do in this year. This is, let me say, a second due diligence after the due diligence we did with Iveco that we have to do now also on the Leonardo side. I think we are very safe to go into a process to take that out. Osnabrück for us is a point that we made no final decision about.
What we always said is what we need is a very clear plan about all the things because we want to make on one side optimization. With optimization, I think we need less space and also fewer people than we expected some years ago in such a growth rate. It is also very clear that the capacity on the vehicle side, these are not huge investments, but these are investments that we have minimum, let me say, to double the capacities on the vehicle side. We will see what's going on with our friends on the automotive side, how can we help? I cannot make a decision today about that thing. Is that fair enough?
Thank you. Just following up on the Q3 indications that you gave.
Yeah. On the Q3 side, and I'm coming back because this is very, very important to understand what's going on. Murcia is giving us on the ammunition side a problem because we cannot sell full shots. The customer wants to have full shots. The powder is ready, but the sealing of the powder, this is the locked depth of the production style. The powder production is ready. All the productions are running. That's the reason that we pile up different things. It depends on the ammunition side, especially on, and you know that this is at the moment the biggest factory on ammunition that we have in Spain. It depends a little bit when we get the final permission from the Spanish government to start again the sealing process. We still at the moment have not this permission. Is there something wrong with the market? No.
Is there something wrong with production? No. It's at the end of the day a stamp that we need from the Spanish government. We try to get it as fast as possible. If we do that, then we will work 24/7 in the sealing process to give full shots to our customers. If it is September, October, I don't know. Therefore, I cannot say how big is the impact in Q3. It's not a detractor or whatever, but at the end of the day, we must be careful and we want to be very transparent to you. For the whole year, we see no impact because we believe 100% that we get the permission in this timeframe, September, October. Still, at the moment, we don't have it, and so there will be absolutely an impact on that.
The second point is that we deliver for EUR 300 million trucks now week by week. In Q3, at the moment, Karlsruhe has not the capacity because we continue production that maybe some of the deliveries also have to come from the 1,400 trucks into Q4. There could be the effect that we are thinning Q2. Could be also in Q3. There could be an infection, if I call it that way, that at the end of the day, it is more back and loaded on Q4. We only want to give you the transparency. It's not a problem of production. It's not a problem of market. It's not a problem of contracts. It's really a point, an issue of delivery, how to deliver to the customer. This is exactly what happens on the truck side, and it's part of permission on the ammunition side.
These are the two things this could impact. Is there a growth? Yes, for sure. Is there a good growth for the year? Yes. We stay on that, what we told you and what we said on the outlook where we will be. The defense growth will be between 35% and 40%. It will be what we don't want, but it will be very end-stack loaded on the Q4 side. We hope that we can do as much as possible in Q3. Is that transparent? Is that clear? It's not a risk, but it's, let me say, to be transparent to you.
That's extremely helpful. Thank you.
Yeah.
The next question comes from Marie-Ange Riggio from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, Armin, and hi, Klaus. Thanks for taking my question. I have a first one on the full year 2025 guidance because it seems quite reassuring to see that during Q2, you did build up EUR 1 billion inventories, which is one of the record levels that you had during Q2. You just mentioned during the presentation that your Q3 and Q4 deliveries for trucks are already prepared. My question is, what is your level of confidence in your current 2025 guidance? Is there any element of conservatism, given the recent development in Europe, or do we have to think about this year as if everything has been pushed to the right? That is why you have not been able to update the guidance in H1. The second question that I have is on your capital allocation, very strong balance sheet since now a few quarters.
We know that your priority, and you have said several times, is to remain M&A. Given your current firepower that you currently have, does it imply that you can be willing to focus on large acquisition, or will you consider further shareholder return? Thanks.
Maybe I start with the second point, Marie-Ange. On the acquisition side, we are looking at the moment really to fill our gaps that we have in the product portfolio. As I said, year by year, we want to grow, let me say, minimum EUR 1 billion on the sales, and we are able to invest also EUR 1 billion for the M&A because, and this is what I tried to tell you before, we don't want to be a bank. We don't want to select all the money only to have it on our bank account. We want to use it, but we don't want, let me say, to overspread, let me say, our balance sheet. On the other side, maybe it's a good idea that my colleague Klaus is going about that. He's a financial star here in the company.
Yeah. In terms of the capital allocation, we really don't see any change to what we mentioned earlier. As Armin mentioned, we don't want to be a bank. We see capital as a buyback of shares as basically the ultimate option if we don't find any better use for the money. We want to balance also the prepayments and the cash inflows, and there are several ways to balance this. One way also is to basically extend our product portfolio, as mentioned, through M&A activity. As you rightly mentioned, we are prepared also for larger acquisitions, but at the moment, that is not in clear view.
In terms of the other questions, in terms of the confidence for the full year, as Armin mentioned, there have been some delays in the order placement by the German government due to, by the setup of the new government in the negotiations also following the NATO summit. We didn't think it appropriate now to change our guidance given that the contract negotiations are all ongoing. We will have more clarity in the upcoming months, but as of the moment, we are very confident that we will achieve what we have promised.
Okay. Thank you very much .
Thank you, Marie-Ange.
The next question comes from David Perry from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Hello, Armin, and hello, Klaus. Hope you're both well. Two questions, please. Maybe one each. There are lots and lots of press reports coming out about these huge numbers of vehicles that Germany may want to buy, in particular Boxers. I just wondered if there's anything you can share with us that's maybe more concrete than press reports. I'm also curious how quickly you can industrialize, in particular on the Boxer, like what sort of annual production rates you think are possible in the coming years. The second one is for Klaus, if possible. If I take the midpoint of your margin guidance for this year for vehicles and electronics, both of them would imply a very strong margin in the second half. I think higher than you've done before. Are you comfortable with that? Thank you.
Yeah, David. First of all, as you said, we have an agreement now not to speak about the numbers, but I can give you one thing that what you can read in the press at the moment is conservative.
Okay. With regard to Boxer or the whole package of vehicles?
The whole package of vehicles, and especially on the Boxer side. It's what you can see in the press, it's a very conservative number. The reason for that is also that the press is feeding with conservative numbers because the government doesn't like that at the end, and everybody knows what we want to do. This is number one. The second point is what I told you is, let me say, we have to build up capacities and not capacities to have the factories. We have factories about that. What we want to do on the factory side is we want to do more like we did on the ammunition optimization. In a period, and we must be ready in 2027, we must be ready to produce, let me say, in full capacity.
We have a very clear picture with the government how many vehicles they want per year, and we are ready in this area. We started the investments. We started the area of optimization. There will be automated, totally different than before. Good
At the moment, as I said, automating chassis production, automating welding stations, automated cutting, finding synergies between different areas, better vertical integration like we did on the ammunition side. Exactly what we discussed, especially both of us discussed several times about this vertical integration effect that we do. This is also a margin effect at the end of the day. We are at the moment in that way to make a better vertical integration also on the vehicle side. The concept is ready. It's harder for me now because I could be also very transparent, not let me say to have a very clear guidance from the government, not to speak about these numbers. I can give you the numbers, 100%, but I could give it, but I cannot because of this agreement that we have with the government. Believe me, it's a very conservative press release that you have.
Okay. Thank you.
In terms of the margin for electronic solutions, vehicle systems, these are both divisions that were a little bit pulled back into the margin in, and in terms of electronic solutions and then growth for vehicle systems as we discussed. Once, as mentioned, the production for F-35 will start, the basic ramp-up cost will be compensated, and we won't have the same burden on our P&L together with the additional growth that will significantly lift the margins in electronic solutions. For vehicle systems, we have the pre-produced trucks ready for delivery. The deliveries have now started, and that will basically push the margin for vehicle systems as well, considering that we will not have the same level of pre-produced trucks by the end of this year. These are two drivers for improvement of both margins in these two divisions that you questioned.
Thank you very much.
It's a pleasure, David.
The next question comes from George McWhirter from Berenberg. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Thank you very much for the questions. I've also got two, please. Firstly, on the slide five on the presentation again, I understand you don't want to go into the details, but on the EUR 30 million- EUR 35 billion order intake for the vehicles, are you able to broadly split out that by vehicle type, if possible?
Yeah. I'm sure I'm able to do that, to do this. The biggest pack is the Boxer. The 8x8s are by far the biggest. As I said, the numbers you can see in the press are conservative. The potential is very, very high on Boxer. I would say the second biggest part is the infantry fighting vehicle and the main battle tank area. On the Boxer, we speak about really double-digit billions, so mid-sized double-digit billions. On the main battle tank, we say mid-sized single-digit billions in that area. There is also the artillery. There are a lot of artillery items also coming up. It's a self-propelling howitzer, it's the RCH 155. The 8x8 is by far the biggest.
Thank you for the detail. The second question is on the same slide. I don't think the U.K. is on the list of international opportunities there. I think you've already won that gun barrel contract to make gun barrels in the U.K. Do you still see potential for winning contracts on how to supply ammunition in the U.K.?
The gun barrels are at the moment the point where we go forward. We are in discussion with the British government about special ammunitions, and we are in discussion with the British government, especially also about powder technologies. I believe that this year we will get a final decision from Great Britain if they want to go with us. You see, at the moment, it is not in our plan. It's a potential to go forward in, but it is not safe. If it is not relatively safe, we don't take it into our potential there.
Thank you very much, Armin.
A pleasure, George.
The next question comes from Benjamin Heelan from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Afternoon, Armin. Thanks for the questions. I had a couple. First of all, you've announced, obviously, Capital Markets Day in November. Can you just talk a little bit about what we can expect there? Is there going to be midterm guidance? Is it going to be on capital allocation? Just high-level framework of what we can expect at CMD, that would be awesome. Also, there's been a couple of articles now about the German government potentially launching a strategic fund to invest in defense companies. I just wondered if you have any thoughts around this. Is the German government wanting German industry an opportunity for you from a consolidation perspective? Just any thoughts around that? Just coming back on some of your comments on Anduril. It sounds as though you feel the opportunity is more in the missile side of the portfolio at Anduril.
Obviously, they have quite a wide-ranging autonomy portfolio as well. Is there an opportunity in drones and autonomy with Anduril? Just how can we think about that?
Yeah. On the Capital Markets Day, for sure, we have a clear picture because then, mostly of the contracts are signed or nearly signed at that point. On the Capital Markets Day, I think we can give you a more detailed figure, what we did last time for 2027 and also for 2030. Maybe I can have a few, then also a little bit more behind 2030 because of the contracts that we will book. You know, we are as much transparent as we can be. This is exactly what we want to do on the CMD. We're preparing different things. Also, maybe we can officially, we made officially then also some decisions on the M&A side to implement that into our growth story. I think there will be a lot of good news for you in that area. Strategic fund or also consolidation.
German government is much more active at the moment, and in that area, German government is, let me say, weekly, nearly daily in contact with us and especially also with me. What we can do in this point, they love those. On one side, they love the boys who, who must, who make the job, who have the factories, who make the job, who make it happen. They love also to say, "Okay, what are possible also investments that we do?" These are, as you know, smaller investments in startups and other things. The point for me is that we do as Rheinmetall, and that's our bloody job to do both. We have to look for the innovative small companies, and this is what we do. We cooperate with different companies. Anduril is one of them. Other smaller companies are others.
We cooperate at the moment with four or five drone factories if there is something going forward. We bought one of the companies now also here in Germany who gives us more capacities. This is not the big stories. That's not the reason, let me say, if a small company who is at the moment doing nearly no sales, and if they make one small agreement, this is, let me say, a huge point. If Rheinmetall is booking EUR 100 million for drones, nobody takes care about that. This is very clear. I understand that because you expect billions and multi-billions of that of the big boys there. We do it, and we have our own group. We have our own department who is taking care of that. On Anduril, we are very flexible. What we are doing is our team, our technology team is checking all the technologies Anduril has.
The CEO of Anduril says, "It's hard for me to make business here in Europe." I need, let me say, one guy who is really taking care about my technologies. He said, "Rheinmetall would be a good partner." He offered us all the technologies they have to do something also in joint ventures where Rheinmetall has the majority. This is our idea to create joint ventures with Rheinmetall majority to create European hubs for companies like Anduril, like Lockheed, etc., that we open, let me say, the business for the United States to make 30%, 40% for the U.S. companies, the rest for European companies. If they have good technologies, we can implement that technology to Germany.
If you say autonomy and if you say, "Yes, but what's going on if you ask me for fury and other things in this area?" I don't know who is now the winner in that point. We as Rheinmetall must be open. If Anduril, Lockheed, or if Boeing is making the race, at the moment, I think that the newcomers who want to develop some new things are not the preferred guys because the timeline is too long, as I discussed before. Is that okay, Ben?
Very clear. Thank you, Armin. Appreciate it.
Thank you.
The last question for today's call comes from Sash Tusa from Agency Partners. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good afternoon. I've got two questions. Firstly, on the orders that you're expecting or hoping for over the next 12 or so months, none of those orders seem to include the missile programs that you highlighted as potentially part of your joint venture with Lockheed Martin. That included ATACMS, PAC-3, GMLRS, JAGM, and so forth. When do you see those coming into German spending requirements? What are the issues in terms of, I think on the last call, you said you thought ATACMS would be the first missile you put into production. Is that still the case? Do you have all the authorizations from the U.S. for an overseas production of a ballistic missile? That's my first question.
Yeah. Let's start with the ATACMS side. As you know, the ATACMS production in the United States will be closed because they focus on PRISM. What we are doing at the moment to work out, it's still not done. We are on the way. You know, it's not easy to handle all this permission stuff, which is going forward. My expectation is that end of the year, we are able to do it. In 12 months, we are ready for the rocket motors. First of all, the rocket motor qualification must be done. We start in 12 months the rocket motor production. Then we need the rocket motor qualification. We are end of 2026 so that we see the first impact in, let me say, middle of 2027. This is our timeframe.
That's the reason that at the moment, I'm not looking for that because this will not happen in H1-2026. Without rocket motors and without a qualification in this area, I think it's very hard. For example, there are discussions also if, let me say, HIMARS, GMARS, or as you know, we had the first firing on GMARS now also in White Sands, it was very positive. I cannot book it because we are at the moment not qualified. We prepare ourselves for that. As I said, my timeline that you see something on the top line will be in 2027. In one year's time, maybe in 2026, if we are on a good way, if the customer sees that the production lines are ready, etc., etc., then we can speak about order intake. It will be after the period that you see on page number five.
Yeah, Sash, is that clear? That's the reason that it's not in.
Thank you. That's very useful. Just to be clear on the rocket motors, is the rocket motor that you will be qualifying an ATACMS motor or a GMLRS motor or a generic design to show that you can do the extrusions and get the reliability in terms of the mixing?
I think that we have to, as you know, we have to qualify every rocket motor, and we have a multifunctional production line. In that, with three mixers, we can produce also different rocket motors, let me say, in one time slot. It is a huge piece, a huge factory that we build up there. My target is very clear. At the end of the day, it should be 10 different rocket motors that we have to produce. Then we are a real international player on rocket motors.
Great, thank you very much indeed.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Armin Papperger for any closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much. Thank you very much for these interesting discussions. As I said, I 100% believe that the way that we are going forward is the right way. The team is prepared. We have the right people on board. We build up at the moment our supply chain, which is really great. We qualify ourselves with new products in the product portfolio. Let's make it happen. We have now to deliver. Thank you very much for your time. Hopefully, I see you very soon. Thanks a lot.
Ladies and gentlemen, the conference is now over. Thank you for choosing Chorus Call, and thank you for participating in the conference. You may now disconnect the lines. Goodbye.