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WHY THE LARGEST MILITARY IPO IN EUROPEAN HISTORY IS COMBUSTING

Source: https://hntrbrk.com/csg/

The article describes CSG as a company that went public on the Amsterdam Stock Exchange in early 2026 with an exceptionally strong investment story: European nations are arming themselves, Ukraine is consuming massive amounts of ammunition, and CSG presents itself as one of the key European players capable of supplying medium- and large-caliber ammunition. According to Hunterbrook, however, investors may have bought something different from what was suggested to them—not a fully vertically integrated manufacturer like Rheinmetall, but a group whose significant portion of revenue may come from the purchase, refurbishment, and resale of older ammunition.
The main concern relates to production capacity. According to the article, the prospectus stated a total capacity of roughly 630,000 rounds of medium- and large-caliber ammunition per year and also claimed that 80% of production consists of 155mm ammunition. Hunterbrook concludes from this that investors may have been led to believe that CSG produces roughly half a million rounds of 155mm ammunition per year. However, the authors claim that during their own reconstruction of the production trail, they identified only one factory capable of the final assembly of this ammunition and estimate its production to be significantly lower. When asked, CSG refused to disclose the breakdown of capacities by ammunition type and stated that it does not typically disclose such information.
Another issue is the sustainability of the business model. According to Hunterbrook, if a significant portion of the business is based on recommissioning—that is, refurbishing and returning older munitions to service—CSG’s growth depends on the availability of global stocks of usable old munitions. The article argues that these stocks may be dwindling, while demand from Ukraine and NATO remains high. The authors also note that the so-called Czech ammunition initiative may face political and financial pressure, which could weaken one of the key channels through which ammunition reaches Ukraine.
A significant portion of the text also addresses issues surrounding the IPO’s transparency. Hunterbrook notes that shortly after the IPO, information emerged about a Slovak framework contract worth up to 58 billion euros, in which—according to other investigative media outlets—the participation of the countries mentioned by the Slovak defense minister had not been confirmed. The article further describes the suspension of the Spanish FMG factory by NATO’s procurement agency due to alleged “sanctionable practices” and a dispute with Petr Kratochvíl, a minority shareholder with special rights, who reportedly demanded the buyout of his stake for 1.4 billion euros. According to Hunterbrook, these matters were not clearly and comprehensively described in the prospectus.

Read more

WHY THE LARGEST MILITARY IPO IN EUROPEAN HISTORY IS COMBUSTING May 6, 2026

Hunterbrook’s in-depth investigative article examines the Czechoslovak Group following its record-breaking European military IPO. The piece investigates whether CSG actually possesses the production capacity it suggested to investors, or whether a significant portion of its ammunition business relies on refurbishing and reselling older ammunition. The article also highlights allegedly insufficiently disclosed risks in the prospectus, the suspension of the Spanish factory by the NATO procurement agency, a controversial Slovak ammunition framework contract, and a dispute with minority shareholder Petr Kratochvíl.

Interview: CSG’s Shadow Deals and Broken Promises March 19, 2026

A founding insider exposes troubling practices inside Europe’s rising defense giant CSG—from concealed minority stakes during its IPO to alleged last-minute reversals and undervalued buyout offers. The revelations raise serious questions about transparency, investor trust, and whether global capital markets are being asked to bankroll a system built on backroom maneuvering rather than fair play.

Hidden Stakeholder: Why Europe’s CSG Raises Red Flags for America’s Defense Industry March 19, 2026

A newly uncovered dispute inside Europe’s Czechoslovak Group (CSG) is exposing serious transparency failures at the heart of one of the continent’s fastest-growing arms manufacturers. A previously undisclosed minority co-owner—armed with extraordinary control rights—has surfaced with a demand worth billions, raising questions about what investors were never told ahead of the company’s high-profile IPO.
At issue is more than just internal conflict. The failure to disclose a powerful stakeholder and a looming multi-billion-dollar buyout obligation points to a pattern of opacity, conflicting valuations, and potential investor misrepresentation. These are not minor oversights—they are systemic warning signs about how CSG operates behind the scenes.
For the United States, the implications are clear. At a time when Washington is actively prioritizing domestic production, supply chain resilience, and strategic independence under an “America First” defense framework , the rise of opaque foreign defense conglomerates presents a direct challenge. Allowing companies with questionable governance and hidden liabilities into the U.S. defense ecosystem risks undermining the integrity and security of America’s industrial base.