The shares of ABO Energy have clawed back some ground, offering a flicker of optimism after a brutal sell-off. The stock touched €6.00 on 27 April after breaking above its 50-day moving average, and by 30 April it was trading at €5.86, barely budging despite a sharp dip in wholesale power prices that saw German electricity fall to minus €0.48 per kilowatt-hour. Analyst Maximilian Berger describes the current trend as neutral — no euphoria, but no panic selling either.
The modest recovery, however, masks a deeper trauma. Since last August, the stock has shed roughly 85% of its value. The February trough of €4.25 now looks like a distant low, but the gap between the current price and the 200-day moving average underscores just how severe the erosion has been. The long-term downtrend remains firmly intact.
Creditors Buy Time
The spring brought a crucial reprieve. Bondholders approved the company’s restructuring plans by an overwhelming majority, suspending a key negative covenant until the end of 2026. That breathing room allows management to post collateral again for new project tenders, backed by a standstill agreement with major lenders. The financial foundation is still fragile, but it is holding — for now.
Pipeline Progress Despite the Headwinds
Operationally, the renewable energy developer is pushing ahead. ABO Energy recently secured permits from the Federal Network Agency for wind farm expansions in North Rhine-Westphalia and Baden-Württemberg, with commissioning slated for autumn 2027. Fresh building approvals in Saarland and North Rhine-Westphalia have pushed the company’s approved onshore wind portfolio in Germany to around 650 megawatts. In the Main-Tauber district, a hybrid project combining a solar park with a large-scale battery storage facility is also under development.
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The broader industry is in flux. Clearvise posted a 12.6% revenue increase to €40.7 million in its 2025 annual report. PNE’s finance chief Harald Wilbert is stepping down in June for personal reasons, with supervisory board chairman Dirk Simons taking over on an interim basis. Trianel Energieprojekte secured 150 hectares of potential land for solar and storage in the Eifel region. The sector is reshuffling — operationally and at the management level.
Repowering Gains Traction
Negative power prices, while unsettling, don’t tell the whole story. Renewable operators are partly shielded by the EEG feed-in tariff, and for project developers like ABO Energy, site selection and project efficiency matter far more. Repowering is becoming increasingly important. A recent example in northern Hesse illustrates the principle: four new turbines with a combined capacity of 19.4 MW replacing five older units — more output on less land.
A Pivotal Few Months Ahead
The calendar is crowded between now and September. The company faces three mandatory milestones: the annual report, the annual general meeting, and half-year results. The interim management team must deliver on all fronts. Notably, the group still lacks a permanent chief financial officer in the midst of its restructuring.
The targets are ambitious. An efficiency programme is expected to deliver a positive group result as early as this year. For 2027, the board is targeting a net profit of €50 million. That roadmap, however, hinges on attracting new investors soon — without fresh capital, the plan lacks the necessary fuel. The stock’s stability above the €5.80 mark suggests that for now, investors are giving the project pipeline the benefit of the doubt. Hard numbers will come with the next quarterly results.
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