Salem Radio Network News Thursday, October 9, 2025

Health

Ottobock gains on debut after 4.2 billion euro Frankfurt IPO

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By Hakan Ersen and Charlie Conchie

FRANKFURT -German prosthetics firm Ottobock began trading on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange at 72 euros ($83.61) per share on Thursday, exceeding its offer price in the country’s largest initial public offering in more than a year.

The world’s leading manufacturer of artificial limbs planned to raise about 808 million euros through the IPO.

The share issue initially valued the company at 4.2 billion euros based on the offer price of 66 euros apiece, but shares posted a 5.5% gain, trading at 69.6 euros at 1014 GMT.

Ottobock will receive 100 million euros from the offering, with the remaining proceeds going to the founding Naeder family, which will retain more than 80% of the shares, according to the IPO prospectus. 

“This is a great starting point for us,” finance chief Arne Kreitz told Reuters on the Frankfurt trading floor, alongside World Para Athletics Championship medal winners and the display of an outsize prosthetic leg,

“But the long-term development is what really counts,” he said, raising the prospect of about 7% to 9% medium-term sales growth.

Chairman Hans Georg Naeder, a grandson of company founder Otto Bock, read out a poem by a prosthetics user who had regained the ability to walk.

There has been a rash of new listings across Europe in recent weeks, which have buoyed dealmakers after a dearth of activity over the past two years.

Since September, Swiss Marketplace Group debuted in Zurich, Verisure floated in Stockholm with a 13.7 billion euros valuation, and the London Stock Exchange hosted listings for U.S. energy firm Fermi and Beauty Tech Group.

Ottobock shelved a first attempt to go public in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Its successful offering is Germany’s largest since retailer Douglas in March last year.

Hamburg-based billionaire Klaus Michael Kuehne and a fund managed by U.S. asset manager Capital Group acted as cornerstone investors on the deal.

A chunk of the proceeds is expected to be used by the Naeder family to repay a loan from private credit funds, which was taken to buy back a stake in the company from Swedish private equity investor EQT last year, according to the prospectus.  

The family will still owe the financiers around one billion euros and has until the first quarter of 2030 to pay back the debt, the prospectus showed.

While the family’s stake has been reduced to 81% in the IPO, they are expected to further cut their holdings to 70-75% after a 180-day lock-up period, sources previously told Reuters. 

Ottobock, also a global leader in braces that support a patient’s mobility known as orthoses, has grown rapidly in recent years on the back of a number of acquisitions and new product launches.

The war in Ukraine has also driven rising demand for its products, Ottobock CEO Oliver Jakobi told Reuters in 2022. The company sold roughly double the number of foot prosthetics in the second half of that year compared to the entirety of 2021, Jakobi said.

Ottobock, however, has faced scrutiny over its continued operations in Russia. In the first half of this year, more than 8% of its sales were generated in the country. Medical products are not subject to Western sanctions, making the business legally permissible.

The group is also investing in exoskeletons that help workers lift weights as well as in bionic devices that pick up electric nerve signals in residual limbs to give patients intuitive control over their prosthetics.

($1 = 0.8611 euros)

(Reporting by Charlie Conchie, writing by Ludwig Burger, Editing by Kirsti Knolle and Jacqueline Wong, Kirsten Donovan)

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