Siemens AG is navigating a period of significant strategic execution and leadership transition. The industrial conglomerate is simultaneously expanding its footprint in a key overseas market while finalizing its separation from its former energy division, all under the watch of a new Chief Financial Officer. This dual focus on portfolio sharpening and growth investment is setting the stage for the company’s next chapter.
The strategic shifts are substantial. In a decisive portfolio move, Siemens has reduced its voting rights stake in Siemens Energy AG from nearly 15% to 5.54%. This transaction, valued at approximately €3.8 billion, marks a major step in the ongoing separation process that began in 2020, allowing management to concentrate fully on its core industrial automation and mobility businesses. Concurrently, the company is deepening its commitment to North America with a $220 million manufacturing facility in Lexington, North Carolina. Slated to begin production in summer 2026, the plant will serve as a hub for maintaining locomotives and building new passenger cars for Amtrak, supported by state subsidies anticipating an economic return of around $1.6 billion.
Financially, new CFO Veronika Bienert inherits a robust foundation. The company’s first quarter of fiscal 2026 was exceptionally strong, with industrial profit climbing 15% to €2.9 billion. Order intake rose 10% to €21.4 billion, pushing the total order backlog to a record €120 billion. A standout performer was the Digital Industries segment, which surged 37%, fueled by data center deals worth €1.8 billion in the quarter alone. Based on this performance, management raised its full-year earnings per share guidance to a range of €10.70 to €11.10.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Siemens?
Recent stock performance has been volatile. Shares enjoyed a powerful rally on April 8, jumping 8.92% to become the third-biggest gainer in the DAX index, largely driven by broader market optimism related to geopolitical developments rather than company-specific news. Since then, the stock has traded slightly below its 50-day moving average at €226.40, with a Relative Strength Index of 77 indicating overbought conditions. Analyst opinions are divided, with Barclays rating the stock “Underweight” with a €220 price target, while JPMorgan is notably more bullish with a €325 target. The current price remains about 13% below its 52-week high of €261.55.
Key near-term catalysts are on the horizon. At the Hannover Messe starting April 20, Siemens will unveil its “Digital Twin Composer,” an application built on NVIDIA’s Omniverse platform already in use with PepsiCo. The company also plans a summer market entry for private mobile networks in the United States. All eyes will then turn to May 13, when Siemens reports second-quarter results. This will be Bienert’s first full quarterly report as CFO and the final official appearance of her predecessor, Ralf P. Thomas, on the management board. The market will be keen to see if the impressive order momentum from Q1 translates into continued strong operational performance.
Ad
Siemens Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Siemens Analysis from April 10 delivers the answer:
The latest Siemens figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Siemens investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from April 10.
Siemens: Buy or sell? Read more here...







