oldcpu
Jr. Member
- Reaction score
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I note TKMS stock is now up 8% on the day (the news says up 12.5%).
Investing website: Why is TKMS stock surging today
Investing website: Why is TKMS stock surging today

The only think Canadian production would do is further delay getting the subs.Please look at my earlier post on production from a few moments ago
Its not just a local joke. Plenty of people know NB as Irvingstan out West.Ya, both Irving and Davie have not covered themselves in glory when it comes to building military stuff on time and within cost. I would hope the Federal Gov will hold their feet to the fire.
As a resident on NB, I really don't like how both federal and provincial at times seem unwilling to confront the Irvings at times. A local joke is they basically own the province.
I'm curious about that 1 line in that article.The only think Canadian production would do is further delay getting the subs.
If we had a useful sub fleet now, developing a shipyard that could trickle new boats into the fleet would make some sense.
Imagine its a poison pill to expose a leaker?It would be very funny if the actual announcement this afternoon contradicts this leaked announcement.
Someone getting a 12 month posting to Alert.....Imagine its a poison pill to expose a leaker?![]()
Either one is a huge improvement over our current fleet.The better boat wins.
Excellent news for the RCN crews
You're making assumptions. What about TKMS building out a yard here. Like they've done in half a dozen other countries. They are quite good at it.Submarines either by Irving or Davie ?
What could possibly go wrong?
..
Nope.
Fair enough. The sub circle is pretty small, and I know a few were pulling for KSSIII. Yah proof in the pudding. We'll see how the negotiations work out.2 points.
1) The boat is not the problem. It's the delivery schedule and capability of TKMS.
Choosing TKMS just allows room for the LPC to say they did something (we usually confuse announcements for deliverables) and leaves them more room to cancel/trim the order as time goes on.
2) While I understand we all have small circles you do not speak for the whole of our submariner community. The members I am talking to are more side eye to this than jumping for joy.
To sum up great announcement, most of are expecting more than announcements though.
Fair enough. The sub circle is pretty small, and I know a few were pulling for KSSIII. Yah proof in the pudding. We'll see how the negotiations work out.
Oh no, Babcock partnered with Hanwha. And the submarine maintenance community are NOT Babcock fans.I'm curious about that 1 line in that article.
With Babcock have a facility on the WC and Fuhr's announcement later today, I'm wondering if there is a chance that a production facility would be stood up on the WC to cover off the statement in the article.
Buddy, I just want to hang out with you, split a pitcher, eat some wings and swap salty stories. I'm not going to get all hung up on something that will or will not be completed well after I retire. If the contract gets reduced or whatever it gets reduced. It won't be the first or last time.I'll buy you case of Toller Gold when we have 12 German boats under Canadian colours.
Buddy, I just want to hang out with you, split a pitcher, eat some wings and swap salty stories. I'm not going to get all hung up on something that will or will not be completed well after I retire.
While I understand we all have small circles you do not speak for the whole of our submariner community. The members I am talking to are more side eye to this than jumping for joy.
The choice of submarine doesn’t bother me as much as the choice of national partner. Canada is already a fairly close ally of both Germany and Norway through NATO and increasingly as of late, other economic and military partnerships. I personally view deepening of this relationship as a bit of a waste of effort and fundamentally just a continuation of the boring, unambiguous status quo.
Going with the Koreans would have been a bold step into effectively a new partner, given the breadth of their bid and how directly involved their government is. Canada has been talking about pivoting to the Indopacific for years and this would have been concrete proof of such a move. The loss of VLS is also a major kick to firepower aboard the boats, going entirely torpedo launched is rough and very limiting. This is also basically killing any Korean chance of growing their naval exports into the western world, and I would expect they will largely disengage from Canadian procurement in the future. They put everything they had into this make or break contest and seemingly failed, there isn’t anything else they could win in Canadian procurement will come anywhere near the value of this contract.
It seems like Carney is definitely a Europhile after all, we’re more interested in reinforcing an existing relationship compared to diversifying our defence and building new relations.
deliberately leak the wrong thing to see who might leak it? I mean Brian lilly says a source told him it will be a mixed fleet. Maybe we have a case of multiple people told different things. See what leaks out to find your leakerIt would be very funny if the actual announcement this afternoon contradicts this leaked announcement.
Honestly it probably all came down to "build subs in Canada, more money stays here".The choice of submarine doesn’t bother me as much as the choice of national partner. Canada is already a fairly close ally of both Germany and Norway through NATO and increasingly as of late, other economic and military partnerships. I personally view deepening of this relationship as a bit of a waste of effort and fundamentally just a continuation of the boring, unambiguous status quo.
Going with the Koreans would have been a bold step into effectively a new partner, given the breadth of their bid and how directly involved their government is. Canada has been talking about pivoting to the Indopacific for years and this would have been concrete proof of such a move. The loss of VLS is also a major kick to firepower aboard the boats, going entirely torpedo launched is rough and very limiting. This is also basically killing any Korean chance of growing their naval exports into the western world, and I would expect they will largely disengage from Canadian procurement in the future. They put everything they had into this make or break contest and seemingly failed, there isn’t anything else they could win in Canadian procurement will come anywhere near the value of this contract.
It seems like Carney is definitely a Europhile after all, we’re more interested in reinforcing an existing relationship compared to diversifying our defence and building new relations.
All of the army contracts are almost certainly going to Europe and even if the Koreans had a decent chance at them, they are minuscule in value and effort in comparison to this submarine program.Very much this. I don't know what the Koreans can bid on after this. The next big tranche of contracts are all army stuff. But the CA has a lot of preferences for European and American kit. That could be even tougher to overcome than the subs. And on the geopolitics of it, I just don't see what the Europeans are really doing for us economically that is material enough to give them this.
This government seems to be onboard with an increasing number of very questionable pie in the sky domestic industrial investments, so I wouldn’t be surprised that they bit onto a promise such as that in the end.Honestly it probably all came down to "build subs in Canada, more money stays here".
I too was hoping for a shake up. But I can see the through line in the decision process and don't disagree with the points.