Intershop Communications AG – Preliminary 2025 Financial Results
Intershop Communications AG, the German information‑technology and software provider specializing in e‑commerce solutions, released preliminary financial figures for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2025 on 18 February 2026. The company reported the following key metrics:
| Item | 2025 (EUR) | 2024 (EUR) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 33.3 million | 38.8 million | Revenue fell by 5.5 million EUR (≈ 14 %) mainly due to a slowdown in customer investment activity. |
| Cloud revenue | 20.5 million | 20.5 million | Cloud sales remained stable, marking a noticeable improvement in incoming cloud orders. |
| Operating result (EBIT) | –2.8 million | –0.9 million | EBIT widened to a loss of 2.8 million EUR, impacted by a complex major project in the service segment that was recently accepted. |
| Net loss after tax (reported for 2024) | –1.7 million | –1.7 million | The company recorded a loss after tax of 1.7 million EUR in the previous year’s first three quarters; the 2025 figures indicate that the negative trend continues. |
Management Commentary
- Board Appointment: The board confirmed that Markus Dränert’s contract has been extended through March 2029.
- Cost‑Reduction Measures: Management highlighted the implementation of cost‑cutting initiatives aimed at stabilising profitability in the coming year.
- Outlook for 2026: Intershop expects a balanced financial result with slightly lower revenues, contingent on the successful execution of the planned efficiency measures.
Market Context
- Share Price: As of 16 February 2026, the closing price stood at €1.22, within the 52‑week range of €1.00 to €2.14.
- Market Capitalisation: €23,127,512.
- Price‑Earnings Ratio: –8.71, reflecting the current loss position.
Intershop Communications AG continues to focus on providing packaged software that enables customers to design, install, and operate online shopping platforms. The company’s performance in 2025 underscores the challenges posed by reduced client investment and the costs associated with large service‑sector projects, while its stable cloud revenue suggests ongoing demand for its core e‑commerce offerings.




