Kongsberg's new anti-ship missile being fired from the Royal Navy Type 23 frigate HMS Somerset during Exercise Aegir 25 off Norway Royal Navy
Naval

Kongsberg bullish on revenue as defence spending surges

Reuters

Kongsberg aims to triple its revenue by 2029 and to more than quadruple it by 2033, driven by growing military investments in Europe, it said on Wednesday ahead of its investor day presentation.

The Norwegian defence and technology group's order intake and backlog have surged since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, supported by higher defence spending across Europe and strong demand for missiles, air-defence systems and other military equipment.

Kongsberg expects to grow its revenue from NOK33 billion ($3.5 billion) in 2025 to NOK100 billion in 2029 and NOK150 billion in 2033, while targeting an operating profit margin of more than 16 per cent.

"Kongsberg's products and solutions are making a difference as countries invest to protect their people and critical infrastructure," CEO Eirik Lie, who succeeded Geir Håøy earlier this year, said in a statement.

The company can meet demand through investments in production capacity, recruitment, and the development of supply chains, Lie said.

Kongsberg sees strong demand for air-defence systems, strike missiles, remote weapon stations and anti-drone systems.

It added it was well positioned to expand in emerging defence segments, including underwater operations and space activities.

Kongsberg spun off its maritime business in April, separating the civilian-focused unit from its defence operations with backing from the Norwegian state.

In May, it forecast accelerating revenue growth for 2026, as its Q1 order intake more than doubled on strong demand for weapon stations and counter-drone systems.

(Reporting by Marta Frąckowiak in Gdańsk; Editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)