Siemens AG is accelerating its industrial AI strategy on two critical fronts, showcasing tangible progress in factory automation while deepening its embedded role in the global semiconductor supply chain. The dual push comes as the conglomerate prepares for a landmark corporate restructuring.
At the Hannover Messe 2026, the company presented hard data from a pilot using a humanoid robot at its electronics plant in Erlangen. The robot, the HMND 01 Alpha developed with UK-based Humanoid and powered by NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure, operated autonomously for eight-hour shifts. It handled logistics tasks—picking up, transporting, and placing containers—with a reported 90% success rate, moving 60 containers per hour. The Erlangen facility serves as an internal “Customer Zero” testbed for technologies Siemens plans to offer to clients.
A key breakthrough was the development timeline. Humanoid slashed prototype development from an industry-standard 18-24 months to roughly seven months. This was achieved through simulation-based training, where the robot learned in a virtual environment before any physical deployment. Siemens provided the integration layer via its Xcelerator portfolio, including digital twin technology, controllers, fleet management, and industrial communication networks.
Concurrently, Siemens is cementing its position in the semiconductor ecosystem through an expanded partnership with foundry giant TSMC. The collaboration centers on Siemens’ Electronic Design Automation (EDA) software, now certified for TSMC’s most advanced process nodes. A cornerstone is the new “Fuse EDA AI System,” an agent-based platform that automates large portions of the chip design process to minimize errors.
The official certifications cover TSMC’s latest chip generations, including N3A, N2P, and A16. They also extend to tools for designing and verifying silicon photonics and integrate the Solido software for aging simulation in the A14 process. This positions Siemens as a certified key partner alongside specialists like Cadence and Synopsys within the TSMC ecosystem, tapping into a market booming from global AI expansion.
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Investors have responded positively to the strategic direction. Siemens shares recently traded around €242, gaining nearly 14% over the past month and moving decisively above their 50-day average of €230.22.
Running parallel to these operational advances is a profound corporate overhaul. Siemens is preparing to spin off its majority stake in Siemens Healthineers. A vote is scheduled for the ordinary Annual Shareholders’ Meeting in February 2027, where Siemens shareholders are set to receive 30% of Healthineers shares directly into their deposit accounts. Siemens currently holds a 67% stake, meaning it would relinquish majority control.
However, a critical hurdle remains. German tax authorities have not yet granted their approval for the transaction under the German Reorganization Act. Without a ruling of tax neutrality, the proposed timeline remains provisional. Siemens states that separation and clarification processes are well advanced, but final confirmation is still pending.
The company will provide its next financial snapshot in May when it presents results for the second quarter, offering a glimpse into whether these strategic investments in industrial and chip design automation are already impacting the bottom line.
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