Siemens Energy: Record Orders Collide with a Valuation That Leaves No Room for Error
29.05.2026 - 02:59:43 | boerse-global.de
The disconnect between operational momentum and market reception has rarely been starker at Siemens Energy. The company posted a record order intake of €17.7 billion for the second quarter of fiscal 2026, comfortably beating the analyst consensus of €15.6 billion. Revenue edged up 3% to €10.29 billion while earnings per share doubled to €0.89. Yet the stock fell 4.36% on Thursday to €166.76, making it one of the weakest performers in the DAX on a day when peers like Rheinmetall and Infineon advanced.
The headwind is less about the business and more about the price tag. With a trailing price-to-earnings ratio above 60 — and even the forward multiple for fiscal 2027 sitting at a lofty 29.7 — the shares leave little margin for disappointment. After a roughly 98% rally over the past twelve months, many investors are sitting on substantial gains. A strong set of numbers was enough to trigger profit-taking rather than fresh buying.
Gamesa casts a shadow over an otherwise bright picture
While the core energy technology and grid solutions businesses are firing on all cylinders — Grid Technologies alone expects revenue growth of 25-27% with margins between 18% and 20% — the wind turbine subsidiary Siemens Gamesa remains a persistent drain. The unit’s free cash flow worsened to minus €654 million in the quarter, a figure that institutional investors are scrutinising closely given the stock’s elevated valuation. The management upgraded its full-year forecast, now targeting revenue growth of 14-16% and a net profit of around €4 billion, but Gamesa’s cash burn tempers the narrative.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Siemens Energy?
The analyst community reflects that tension. JPMorgan’s Phil Buller reiterated an "Overweight" rating with a €225 price target, pointing to Asian investors who view the company as a key beneficiary of the structural demand for data centre infrastructure and artificial intelligence. That target sits well above the current share price and even the analyst median of €186.30. On the other end of the spectrum, Barclays sees fair value at just €110, underscoring the unresolved question of Gamesa’s long-term profitability.
Technical levels in focus after Thursday’s decline
The pullback has brought Siemens Energy shares almost exactly onto their 50-day moving average of €167.11, a level that now serves as a critical support test. A decisive break below that line could open the door to the 100-day moving average at €158.39. The stock remains roughly 11% below its 52-week high of €188.00 set on April 24, and the relative strength index at 56.7 suggests there is room for further downside before oversold territory is reached.
Meanwhile, the backlog of orders has swelled to €154 billion, providing multi-year visibility. The next quarterly update is due on August 5, and analysts are already pencilling in a dividend of €1.84 per share for fiscal 2026, up sharply from €0.70 the previous year. For now, however, the market’s message is clear: even a record order book cannot insulate a stock from its own valuation when the disappointment risk in the wind business remains unresolved.
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