"Patience is a Super Power" - "The Money is in the waiting"
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Kraken Robotics acquisition of Coveya and it's subsidiaries will make this a much larger, international player in the subsea robotics market!

 



Kraken has been granted market approval of the acquisition of Covelya Group, a leading international provider of mission-critical underwater technology solutions operating through its subsidiary companies including:

Sonardyne International Limited, EIVA A/S, Forcys Limited, Wavefront Systems Limited, Voyis Imaging Inc., and Chelsea Technologies Ltd. 

This acquisition is a "future tech" game changer as Kraken grows into a NATO and international partner in the sub sea robotics market. 

For Kraken Robotics shareholders, I believe this acquisition is transformational.

 I would argue it is the most important event in the company's history, even more significant than any individual NATO contract announced to date.

The Simple Version

Before the acquisition, Kraken was primarily known for:

  • Synthetic Aperture Sonar (SAS)
  • Underwater batteries
  • Minehunting systems (KATFISH)
  • Subsea imaging and robotics

After the acquisition, Kraken becomes something much larger:

A vertically integrated global subsea defense and maritime technology company capable of supplying most of the critical systems needed by autonomous underwater vehicles, mine warfare systems, subsea surveillance networks, and naval intelligence platforms.


This moves Kraken from being a niche supplier to becoming a potential "prime-level" subsea technology partner.


Why Sonardyne Matters


The crown jewel here is Sonardyne International.

Sonardyne is one of the world's leading providers of:

  • Underwater navigation
  • Acoustic positioning
  • Underwater communications
  • Tracking systems
  • Autonomous vehicle guidance

These technologies are used by:

  • NATO navies
  • Offshore energy companies
  • Undersea infrastructure operators
  • Research organizations

Think of Sonardyne as the underwater equivalent of GPS and communications infrastructure.

Kraken previously could "see" underwater using SAS.

Now it can also:

  • Navigate underwater
  • Communicate underwater
  • Position underwater assets
  • Track underwater assets

That is a major leap.


Why This Is Important For NATO

The NATO naval buildout is increasingly focused on:

  • Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs)
  • Uncrewed surface vessels (USVs)
  • Mine countermeasures
  • Arctic surveillance
  • Protection of pipelines and subsea cables
  • Seabed warfare

The challenge is that these systems require multiple technologies:

CapabilityProvider
Sonar imagingKraken
BatteriesKraken
NavigationSonardyne
CommunicationsSonardyne
Survey softwareEIVA
Underwater imagingVoyis
Environmental sensingChelsea
Sonar enhancementWavefront

Kraken can now offer much of this package itself.

That makes Kraken substantially more attractive to:

  • NATO navies
  • Defence primes
  • Naval system integrators

Why EIVA Is A Big Deal

EIVA brings advanced software and autonomous mission planning.

Many investors focus on hardware.

The highest-margin businesses in defense often become:

  • Software
  • Data processing
  • Mission management
  • AI-enabled decision support

EIVA adds these capabilities and gives Kraken recurring software revenues.


Voyis Is Another Hidden Gem
Voyis Subsea Laser imaging

Voyis Imaging provides world-class underwater optical imaging.

Combining:

  • Kraken SAS sonar
  • Voyis imaging

creates a powerful intelligence package for:

  • Mine detection
  • Cable inspection
  • Port security
  • Underwater surveillance

This combination could become a preferred solution for NATO mine warfare operations.


The Revenue Impact

The numbers are substantial.

Management indicated the combined company would have approximately:

  • $365 million revenue (2025 basis)
  • ~24% adjusted EBITDA margins
  • More than 700 customers
  • Approximately 1,200 employees
  • Operations across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and South America.

For perspective:

A few years ago Kraken was a small-cap Canadian ocean technology company.

This acquisition potentially turns it into one of the

largest publicly traded subsea technology firms in the world.


Why This Helps Future NATO Contracts

This may be the biggest investment implication.

Previously Kraken might win a contract for:

  • Sonar
  • Batteries
  • Minehunting equipment

Now Kraken can bid for larger portions of a naval program.

Instead of selling a sensor, Kraken can help deliver an integrated system.

Defense ministries generally prefer fewer suppliers and integrated solutions.

That increases:

  • Contract size
  • Customer stickiness
  • Long-term support revenue
  • Follow-on procurement opportunities

Exactly the type of revenue NATO modernization programs generate.


The Main Risk

There is one major risk.

The acquisition cost:

$615 million.

To finance it Kraken raised significant capital and added debt.

So shareholders must monitor:

  • Integration execution
  • Debt management
  • Synergy realization
  • Customer retention

If management executes well, the acquisition could be highly accretive.

If integration struggles, the size of the deal means mistakes would be costly.


Bottom Line For A Long-Term PNG Investor

If your thesis is that NATO, Canada, the UK, and allied nations will dramatically increase spending on:

  • Mine warfare
  • Undersea surveillance
  • Arctic security
  • Autonomous naval systems
  • Protection of subsea cables and energy infrastructure
  • (Ed Note: it is our thesis)

then this acquisition strengthens that thesis considerably.

Before Covelya, Kraken was a highly specialized technology supplier.

After Covelya, Kraken begins to look more like a global subsea defense technology platform with sonar, batteries, navigation, communications, imaging, software, and autonomous systems under one roof.

From an investment perspective, I view this as moving PNG from a "promising Canadian defense tech company" toward a potential "underwater defense systems champion" serving NATO and allied navies over the next decade. 

The key question is no longer whether Kraken has excellent technology—it is whether management can successfully integrate a company nearly as large as itself and convert that scale into larger defense awards.

Ed Note

I believe this is the rocket fuel Kraken needed to become a complete, international entity 

and a strong NATO partner!


Thursday, December 16, 2010

European Union downplays divisions leading up to meeting. Spanish credit downgrade hinted.


European leaders sought to paper over deep divisions on how best to resolve the debt crisis ahead of a summit on Thursday, and Spain and Portugal came under renewed pressure to get their finances in order.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she had settled a dispute with Jean-Claude Juncker, the chairman of the Eurogroup of countries, over the idea of issuing euro area bonds, but differences still looked likely to arise at the summit.

 
"Jean-Claude Juncker and I had a long telephone conversation and cleared up the issue a while ago," Merkel said in an interview with Germany's Bild newspaper published on Thursday. "With so much at stake, the emotions sometimes get involved."

Juncker, who is a strong advocate of issuing so-called E-bonds, which Merkel says are unnecessary and would dent Germany's credit standing, also said the disagreement was resolved, but has hinted he could raise the proposal anyway.

He said he regretted "dissonances in public" which had given financial markets more cause for concern, and said he was focused on trying to achieve unity ahead of the two-day summit, as well as getting Spain and Portugal to improve their finances.

"They would do well... to present in detail structural reforms to be introduced beyond the plans of consolidation already announced," he told Corriere della Sera.

DOWNGRADE THREAT
Ratings agency Moody's warned Spain on Wednesday that its debt could be downgraded, saying it was worried about its high debt funding needs, indebted banks and regional finances, although it did not expect Madrid to have to follow Greece and Ireland in seeking an EU bailout.

Spain's Treasury paid just slightly less than expected for long-term bonds on Thursday in a key test of investors' appetite for euro zone peripheral debt and a day after Moody's said it may cut the country's rating.
Portugal on Wednesday announced extra measures to cut red tape and bolster structurally slow growth, in a move to convince EU officials and financial markets it is doing enough to stave off the pressure to seek EU financial aid.

EU leaders will gather at 1500 GMT on Thursday for the end-of-year summit, having spent most of 2010 desperately trying to stem a contagion that has consumed Greece and Ireland and now threatens Portugal, Spain and others.

Apart from agreeing to make a small change to the EU's treaty to set up a permanent system for handling financial crises after 2013, they are not expected to take other concrete decisions, inaction that could be interpreted as weakness and exploited by financial markets unconvinced by the euro zone.

Throughout 2010, EU leaders have struggled to show unity and clear communication in handling the crisis, either putting forward half-formed or contradictory proposals, or not agreeing quickly enough on the right course of action.

Repeated statements of unity at half-a-dozen summits have sometimes not been backed up by action, leaving markets skeptical and piling more pressure on the euro and debt yields.

TREATY CHANGES, ECB CAPITAL
As well as approving the change to the EU treaty, demanded by Germany and backed by France over the opposition of several other member states, EU leaders are expected to discuss how they can improve the current temporary financial safety net -- a 750 billion euro ($1 trillion US) joint EU/IMF loan facility.
One possibility is to increase the size of the fund, while another would involve making it more flexible in terms of the loans it can make, including the possibility of credit lines.

Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders said the EU's portion, 440 billion euros, could potentially be doubled to fend off the threat of renewed market pressure on Portugal and Spain, and Spain has also backed the idea of a larger fund.While that may be discussed, EU sources indicate that they do not expect a concrete decision on enlarging the fund. The European Central Bank holds the second day of a regular, non-rate setting meeting on Thursday, when it is expected to agree to ask euro zone member states for more capital, a move to lower its risk profile as it helps tackle the crisis.

That issue may also be discussed among EU leaders on Thursday, when they will be joined by ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet. The ECB has come under pressure to step up its bond-buying program to help those countries struggling to fund themselves in volatile and punitive market conditions.

As well as fears about the debt situation in Portugal and Spain, which has approximately 275 billion euros of sovereign and bank debt expiring in 2011, there are increasing worries about other euro zone member states, including Belgium.

Underlining concerns about the euro zone economy and the strength of its recovery, the dominant services sector expanded at a much slower pace than expected in December, although the manufacturing sector is growing faster than forecast, figures released on Thursday showed. Switzerland, one of the euro zone's largest trading partners, kept interest rates on hold on Thursday, partly a reflection of the euro-area's difficulties, which have offset strong Swiss economic growth this year.
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