KNDS board to decide on highly-anticipated IPO this Thursday
The Franco-German defense giant behind Leopard tanks is preparing for what could be one of Europe's biggest listings in years
KNDS NV, the Franco-German defense company best known for building Leopard tanks, is approaching a pivotal moment. The company’s board will meet Thursday to decide whether to move forward with a dual IPO on the Frankfurt and Paris stock exchanges.
The company’s valuation estimates range from €5 billion to €20 billion, and it’s looking to raise up to €5 billion in new capital.
What KNDS actually does, and why governments care
KNDS manufactures land systems, armored vehicles, and Leopard tanks. The company was formed as a joint venture combining France’s Nexter and Germany’s Krauss-Maffei Wegmann.
Germany plans to acquire a 40% stake in the company following the listing, designed to give Berlin equal footing with Paris in terms of ownership and voting power.
The financial picture heading into Thursday
KNDS has reported strong revenue growth and record-setting order intake. The board originally approved plans for the dual listing back in December 2025. Since then, preparations have advanced through the first half of 2026, and investor discussions have already commenced.
The dual listing in both Frankfurt and Paris mirrors the company’s binational identity and gives KNDS access to two of Europe’s deepest pools of institutional capital.
What this means for investors
The valuation range, spanning from €5 billion to €20 billion, reflects the market’s attempt to price the company. At the low end, you’re looking at a traditional industrial manufacturer valued on current earnings. At the high end, you’re pricing in years of defense budget growth and the strategic value of being “the” European tank company. Where the final number lands will depend on how investor meetings go over the coming weeks, assuming the board gives the green light Thursday.
The equal Franco-German ownership structure provides political stability, with both governments holding a vested interest in KNDS succeeding. However, dual-government oversight can slow decision-making and introduce competing national priorities into corporate strategy.
The record order intake is the most tangible bullish signal, as orders are the leading indicator for defense companies. Revenue follows contracts, and contracts follow political commitments.