Short Sellers Circle Deutz Even as Orders Surge 41% and New CTO Takes Charge
22.05.2026 - 18:02:46 | boerse-global.de
The Cologne-based engine manufacturer is racing to reinvent itself while a prominent hedge fund bets it will stumble. Deutsche’s first-quarter order book swelled by 41.2% to €771 million, revenue climbed 8.4% to €530 million, and adjusted EBIT soared 45.7% to €37.3 million — translating into a 7.0% margin. Yet WorldQuant has raised its net short position to 0.81% of the share capital, signaling skepticism that the operational momentum can be sustained.
To counter such doubts, the board is fortifying its leadership. Katharina Krüger will become Chief Transformation Officer effective 1 June 2026, a newly created role that restores the executive board to three members. Krüger, currently responsible for strategy, HR and transformation, will embed the shift from a traditional engine maker into a broader technology group at the highest decision-making level. Shareholders endorsed the overhaul at last week’s annual general meeting in Cologne’s Gürzenich hall, approving the discharge of the management and supervisory boards with over 99.75% and 95.35% of votes respectively. They also ratified a new five-segment structure covering Services, Engines, NewTech, Energy, and Defense & Other, underpinned by control and profit-transfer agreements with three subsidiaries: SOBEK Group, Deutz Power Systems and DEUTZ Defense Systems.
The transformation road map is ambitious. By 2030, Deutz aims to double revenue to €4 billion while lifting its adjusted EBIT margin to 10%. Around €500 million of that growth is expected to come from bolt-on acquisitions. The “Future Fit” efficiency program is targeting cumulated cost savings of more than €50 million by the end of 2026 compared with 2024; last year alone the company already carved out over €25 million. For the current financial year, management sticks to guidance of €2.3?billion to €2.5?billion in revenue and a margin between 6.5% and 8.0%.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Deutz AG?
The dividend is creeping higher too: €0.18 per share for 2025, up from €0.17 in the prior year. That modest increase may do little to sway traders focused on the stock’s overbought signals. With a relative strength index of 81.4, the shares are trading in technically stretched territory. At €9.66, the stock has slipped roughly 6% over the past month despite a 12% gain since the start of the year and a 37.7% advance over the trailing twelve months. The price sits just below its 50-day moving average of €9.79 but above the 200-day line at €9.52 — a level that, if breached, could trigger further selling pressure.
The next major test comes in August with the half-year report. That will reveal whether the Q1 order surge is converting into sustainable revenue growth and margin expansion. With Krüger at the helm of transformation, the restructuring now has a dedicated voice in the boardroom. The direction is clear, but the road to doubling sales remains littered with execution risks — and short sellers are already parked on the shoulder.
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Deutz AG Stock: New Analysis - 22 May
Fresh Deutz AG information released. What's the impact for investors? Our latest independent report examines recent figures and market trends.
