Siemens Combines AI-Driven Orders and Italian Rail Expansion as Analysts Raise Price Targets
20.05.2026 - 12:24:47 | boerse-global.de
Siemens is navigating a period of contrasting signals, with surging order books and bullish analyst revisions colliding against margin erosion and a technically overextended stock. The industrial group is leaning on robust software demand from AI data centers and a strategic acquisition in Europe’s rail sector to sustain its growth trajectory, while concurrently returning capital to shareholders through a freshly announced buyback.
Orders for the second fiscal quarter rose 11% to just over €24 billion, powered significantly by the Mobility division, which saw a 41% jump to €5.3 billion. Revenue came in at roughly €19.7 billion, flat nominally but up 6% on a currency-adjusted basis. Yet underlying profitability came under pressure: the industrial margin slipped to 15.4%, and earnings per share edged slightly lower. The Mobility unit’s result dropped 28% to €208 million, weighed down by US tariffs and delayed project calls. Management subsequently trimmed its growth forecast for the division to a range of 5–7%.
Wall Street reacted favourably to the resilience of the top line and the tailwinds from artificial intelligence. Goldman Sachs analyst Daniela Costa lifted her price target for Siemens from €235 to €290, citing expectations of rising order intake and stronger revenues. Her estimates for 2027 now sit well above consensus. Costa also pointed to the group’s capital-allocation strategy, anticipating a swift renewal of the expiring share buyback. That expectation was soon validated: Siemens announced a new repurchase programme of up to €6 billion over five years, underscoring its confidence in cash generation.
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JPMorgan raised its target to €335 and UBS to €310, both maintaining buy ratings. Barclays, in contrast, retained its underweight stance. The divergent views reflect the tension between a buoyant software franchise – buoyed by US data-centre investment – and the cyclical pressure on industrial margins.
On the inorganic front, Siemens Mobility has agreed to acquire core operations of Italy’s MERMEC Group, a specialist in rail signalling, diagnostics and measurement technologies. The deal brings roughly 1,700 employees and annual revenues of about €430 million (fiscal 2025), with a presence in more than 70 countries. Siemens plans to turn the Ferrosud plant in Matera into a next-generation diagnostics development centre. The purchase price remains undisclosed, and closing is expected by the end of 2026, pending regulatory approvals. The group believes the transaction will become earnings-accretive by the second year after completion.
For the overall company, the management reaffirmed its fiscal 2026 outlook: comparable sales growth of 6–8% and adjusted earnings per share (pre PPA) of €10.70–€11.10. The next major check point comes on 6 August 2026, when Siemens releases its third-quarter results.
At the stock market, the shares have given back some ground after touching a 52-week high of €272.20 in mid-May. They recently traded around €256.70, roughly 5.7% below that peak, having delivered a 16% gain over twelve months. However, the relative-strength index has climbed above 80, signalling an overbought condition that may limit further short-term upside. Investors are now weighing whether the dual impetus of AI-fuelled demand and a rail-focused expansion can sustain the momentum through the second half.
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