NEW YORK, Feb 10, 2026, 10:16 EST — Regular session
Dauch Corporation (DCH) edged up 0.5% to $8.60 early Tuesday, after kicking off the session at $8.37 and bouncing between $8.39 and $8.65. Shares last traded 4.5 cents above Monday’s finish, with volume near 294,000.
Shares barely budged as the Detroit-based parts maker adjusts to life under a new name and ticker. What used to be American Axle & Manufacturing started trading on the NYSE as “DCH” back on Feb. 5. CEO David C. Dauch labeled the rebrand “a transformational moment” in a statement from January. 1
All eyes shift to the next date: Dauch’s set to report fourth-quarter numbers before markets open on Feb. 13. The company will host its conference call at 10:00 a.m. ET—investors waiting for clues on guidance and first hints about cost trends. 2
The company, in a late Monday filing, revealed it’s granting Markus Bannert an inducement equity award tied to his executive officer appointment, effective Feb. 5. According to Dauch, Bannert’s performance stock units start with a target of 90,909 shares but could grow to 272,727 if certain share-price benchmarks are hit, based on a 20-day average measured through March 31, 2029. Payouts increase once the stock clears $12, maxing out at 300% of the target if shares touch $22. 3
The award looks like a retention play with a long vesting schedule. It’s also a clear signal: if those targets get met, stock-based compensation will dilute current shareholders.
Auto-parts names split directions early. BorgWarner tacked on roughly 1%. Dana slipped. Lear also traded a bit down.
Dauch supplies driveline and metal-forming components to the auto industry, serving electric, hybrid, and internal combustion vehicles, company data on LSEG shows. 4
The transition from announcing a deal and rebranding to delivering on earnings and cash flow isn’t always smooth. If demand shows any hint of cooling, or if integration and restructuring expenses start to spike, sentiment could shift fast.
Investors are eyeing the Feb. 13 update for clarity on margins, cash flow, and how the company is handling fresh operations and added leadership tiers—all under scrutiny as it navigates these changes.
Friday brings the next big event: an earnings report set for Feb. 13. 5