Kongsberg builds up defence production capacity to meet growing orders

(Reuters) -Norwegian engineering group Kongsberg is building up production capacity to meet growing orders for its defence products, especially missiles, as European nations bulk up their military spending.

Kongsberg, which has customers in defence, aerospace, maritime, energy and fishing industries, booked orders worth 18.18 billion Norwegian crowns ($1.80 billion) in the second quarter, 5% more than last year, it said on Wednesday.

The Defence & Aerospace business made up 54% of those, as CEO Geir Håøy said the company was experiencing record-high market activity in the sector.

Many European nations have pledged to significantly increase defence budgets in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and as U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has threatened to scale back military support for the region.

Kongsberg has opportunities to increase production in Norway and is building up capacity in Australia, Håøy said in a call with analysts and media. Later this year, it will also start building production facilities in the United States.

“We are quite comfortable with our own capacity going forward,” Håøy told Reuters.

He said that the facility in Australia was being built and funded by the government, which is also the customer, and Kongsberg will equip and lease the plant on a long-term basis. In the U.S., it is making an investment of its own.

The group will invest 3% to 5% of its sales into capacity expansions, mainly on the defence side, finance chief Mette Toft Bjørgen added.

It is also continuously working with its supply chain, which Håøy said was as important as building its own capacity.

Kongsberg’s second-quarter core earnings (EBITDA) rose 28% to 2.33 billion crowns, while five analysts polled by LSEG were expecting 2.25 billion on average. Its revenue of 13.9 billion crowns was 1.7% below the consensus.

Kongsberg’s shares were 9% lower at 0954 GMT, the second biggest fallers on Europe’s benchmark STOXX 600 index.

Equity analysts from ABGSC Capital Goods Research, Arctic Securities and Sparebank 1 Markets said they saw some weaknesses in different parts of the results, most of them stemming from a soft performance in the maritime division.

($1 = 10.0974 Norwegian crowns)

(Reporting by Marta Frąckowiak in Gdansk; editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)