Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
Rich Smith, The Motley Fool
Sat, Mar 15, 2025, 6:09 AM 5 min read
In This Article:
A funny thing happened on the way to President Donald Trump's tariffs war, and his threats to pull out of Nato and cut off military aid to Ukraine. Europe discovered it needs to spend more on its own defense.
Shares of European defense companies have been on an upsurge ever since. One European satellite company in particular caught my eye last week when it suddenly rocketed more than 500% over just five days of trading: From Feb. 28 through March 5, shares of satellite telecommunications stock Eutelsat (OTC: ETCM.Y) -- which you can mentally pronounce to yourself as "EU telsat" as a reminder of what it is -- jumped from just $0.35 per share to close at $2.21. It's given back some of those gains over the last few days, granted, but at Friday's prices, remained up more than 300% from its price at the end of February.
What's behind this insanely good performance from a little-known (in the U.S., at least) space stock?
At first, you might look at the share price and dismiss the move as nothing new. A $0.35 stock becoming a $2 stock, then subsiding? That happens with penny stocks all the time -- except the cultural concept of "penny stocks" differs on different sides of the ocean. Here in the U.S., stocks costing less than $5 a share are infamous for their volatility and rightly regarded with skepticism, as they so often turn out to be fly-by-night operations, value traps, and not serious businesses.
Over in Europe, however, things work differently. Giant, well-funded companies like British Telecom and British Airways parent International Consolidated Airlines, for example, routinely trade for just a couple of bucks a share.
And that's the case with Eutelsat, too. Although its market cap is just $3 billion, Eutelsat is a sizable company doing $1.4 billion in annual business and generating substantial cash flow.
And why is this satellite company's stock going up all of a sudden? European Union nations are planning to increase their defense spending in response to U.S. threats to cut off military aid and access to satellite intelligence to Ukraine, which has been fighting off a Russian invasion for just over three years.
Ukraine's backers in the EU seem especially concerned that Ukraine might lose access to Starlink satellite communications services provided by SpaceX, which are seen as crucial to the war effort. In response to this threat, Eutelsat was quick to point out in a media statement that its OneWeb satellites "can provide an alternative for certain government and defense applications." Eutelsat added that it is in talks with "European institutions and business partners [to] enable the swift deployment of additional user terminals" to plug any gap created if Ukraine is deprived of Starlink services.
Comments