Rheinmetall sells struggling auto division to Aequita in €350 million deal

Industry:    21 hours ago

Germany’s Rheinmetall will sell its struggling automotive unit to Munich-based investment firm Aequita for about €350 million ($406 million), it said on Wednesday, in one of its ​final steps to focus on defence.

Rheinmetall, whose business has boomed since ​the start of the Ukraine war as Europe boosts defence ⁠spending, has been seeking a buyer for its Power Systems division ​since last year and classified it as a discontinued operation in December ​2025.

The unit will be sold for a provisional €350 million, subject to potential adjustment when the deal closes, expected in the fourth quarter.

The sale will trigger additional impairment charges ​of about €200 million, after Rheinmetall booked a non-cash charge of around €350 ​million in December linked to the business.

“In particular, the further deterioration in the business ‌situation ⁠in the automotive sector had an impact on the circumstances and terms of the final agreement,” the company said in a statement.

Aequita, an investment firm that buys and restructures companies, plans to retain the roughly 6,250 ​employees in the unit ​worldwide, Rheinmetall ⁠added.

“The company is an excellent addition to our automotive division, which will now generate revenues of approximately €5 billion,” ​said Axel Geuer, chairman and co-CEO of Aequita.

He added ​Aequita would ⁠support the business’s long-term development and seek synergies across its automotive portfolio.

Excluded from the sale are three German locations of aluminium casting specialist KS Huayu ⁠AluTech, ​a stake in automotive sensor joint venture ​Dermalog SensorTec and car parts maker Pierburg’s Abadiano plant in Spain, Rheinmetall said.

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