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Germany’s OHB to consider legal action if EU clears Airbus, Thales, Leonardo satellite merger

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 9:09 AM

By Gianluca Lo Nostro

May 7 (Reuters) – German satellite maker OHB will consider legal action if EU antitrust regulators approve a planned merger of the satellite businesses of Airbus, ​Thales and Leonardo, its CEO said on Thursday.

The three ‌aerospace and defence groups announced plans in October to combine their satellite manufacturing activities into a standalone company, code-named “Project Bromo”.

The companies say the venture would create a stronger European player, able to compete with Elon Musk’s SpaceX ‌and ​Chinese rivals.

But OHB, one of Europe’s few ⁠independent satellite makers, fears ⁠the deal could weaken competition in Europe.

“We are raising concerns because it impacts our supply chain,” OHB chief Marco Fuchs told Reuters, describing the merger as “rather a disturbance of the market”.

Asked whether ​OHB would consider a legal challenge if the European Commission cleared the deal, Fuchs said: “Yes.”

The core issue for regulators is ⁠likely to be whether the new ⁠company would mainly use its scale to compete ​globally, as its backers argue, or whether it would reinforce their ​position in Europe.

Fuchs dismissed comparisons with Chinese competitors, saying Europe ‌does not buy satellites from China.

OHB’s market value has risen roughly fivefold over the past year, to about 5 billion euros. On Thursday, it reported an 18% rise in quarterly revenue, with ⁠order backlog up 45%.

The company is considering financing options, Fuchs said, after abandoning a previous plan to take OHB private alongside minority investor ⁠KKR, as geopolitical ‌changes have altered investor views of space companies.

Bloomberg ⁠News reported in March that the Fuchs family, ​which ‌owns around 65% of OHB, and KKR, which ​owns roughly ⁠29%, were discussing a sale of shares equivalent to 20% of the company. Fuchs declined to comment on the report.

“I’m not going to sell anything in a secondary (share sale),” Fuchs said, without disclosing how much OHB aimed to raise.

(Reporting by Gianluca Lo Nostro; Editing ​by Matt Scuffham)