1Année·

So, my $OHB (+3,38 %) shares that I put up for sale were booked out at the limit today. It is somehow not foreseeable how long KKR will need for the regulatory stuff. And as the shares will not rise any further and there will be no more dividends, I have sold them. I should have done it straight away, I've already given away some performance elsewhere ... Well, I could have.


This freed up just under €22,000 (500 OHB shares sold at €43.8, making +506% and +€2200 net dividends)


A portion was directly reinvested.

5Tsd € $ISPA (+0,03 %)

5Tsd € $VAPX (+1,83 %) (new in the securities account)

5Tsd € $XD5E (+0,77 %)

2Tsd € $WLD (+0,32 %)


For the rest, I'll go back through my watchlist and continue to add to ETFs.

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6 Commentaires

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I'll drive past OHB again on my way home. OHB wants to go public soon anyway.
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@Aktienmasseur That's what I meant by KKR, they are buying into OHB. I was able to convert my shares into a "for sale" class at the time. But it just takes too long for me ...
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@Aktienmasseur Unfortunately, I also sold at the beginning of 2025 at around €45. I made an 80% profit, but when I look at the price today, it's a tragedy. Who else felt the same way?
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Hi, I saw yesterday that OHB is still listed on the stock exchange. I also sold mine back then. Didn't follow it up after that. Wasn't the share delisted by KKR?
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@bz2024
Delisting does not mean a trading halt. The official delisting only applied to the "Regulated Market" (Xetra/Frankfurt). Regional stock exchanges (such as Hamburg or Munich) often simply continue to list the share on the OTC market as long as there are still shares in circulation. And they are.
KKR & the Fuchs family hold approx. 94%. For a squeeze-out (compulsory exclusion of the remaining shareholders), however, 95% is required in Germany. The remaining 6% "free float" therefore still technically exists.

The liquidity of the remaining shares is at rock bottom and the spreads (difference between buying and selling) are huge. The price often no longer has anything to do with reality. Therefore, for most people it is a classic case of "look, don't touch". Those who still have remaining shares often hope for a higher settlement in the final squeeze-out. But when and if that happens ... who knows.
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@finanzperpetuum
Thanks for the info
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