Siemens Energy Raises Buyback to €3 Billion as AI Data Center Demand Turns Into Cash

Siemens Energy Raises Buyback to €3 Billion as AI Data Center Demand Turns Into Cash

May 12, 2026

Munich, May 12, 2026, 11:04 CEST

Siemens Energy is bumping up its share buyback target for 2026 to as much as 3 billion euros, up from the previous 2 billion, after reporting a 42% jump in pre-tax free cash flow, the company announced Tuesday. The overall buyback initiative, which could reach up to 6 billion euros by 2028, stays the same. Reuters

What’s changed: the rush for power gear is no longer just bookings on paper—Siemens Energy is finally seeing cash flow. The company locked in record orders at 17.7 billion euros, with its backlog swelling to a record 154 billion, fuelled by U.S. projects, gas services, and grid tech. German outlet Maschinenmarkt highlighted the impact of AI data centers gulping electricity. Siemens Energy

Some investors cashed out. Siemens Energy slipped in morning XETRA trading, down as much as 4.11% to hit 171.16 euros—even after the company reported it had repurchased around 1.8 billion euros of stock through its current buyback scheme. Finanzen

Comparable revenue climbed 8.9% to 10.3 billion euros for the second quarter. Adjusted profit—profit before special items—came in at 1.16 billion euros, up from 906 million euros a year ago. Net income also moved higher, rising to 835 million euros from last year’s 501 million euros. Deutsche Boerse

Christian Bruch, the chief executive, described the market backdrop as “very positive” even with ongoing geopolitical uncertainty, according to Handelsblatt. Bruch pointed to the firmer outlook as a sign of trust that the recent momentum is set to persist. Handelsblatt

Siemens Energy is forecasting stronger performance for fiscal 2026, now projecting comparable revenue growth between 14% and 16%, compared with its earlier estimate of 11% to 13%. The company also bumped its profit-margin target before special items higher, aiming for 10% to 12%. Pre-tax free cash flow? Siemens Energy sees it at roughly 8 billion euros—a notable jump from the previous 4 billion to 5 billion euro range. Siemens Energy

Performance varied widely across the group. Gas Services booked 8.87 billion euros in orders, while Grid Technologies came in at 7.00 billion euros. Over at Siemens Gamesa—the company’s wind business that’s been a persistent drag—the loss before special items tightened to 44 million euros from 249 million euros a year ago. Deutsche Boerse

It’s been a rapid buyback: Siemens Energy disclosed snapping up 11.6 million shares by May, spending roughly 1.83 billion euros. The bulk of activity landed in March and April, according to company filings. Siemens Energy

Analysts mostly kept their upbeat stance, but price targets weren’t aligned. RBC’s Colin Moody stuck with his Buy call and the 200-euro target. Bernstein’s Alasdair Leslie, also on Buy, held firm on his 150-euro mark. MarketScreener

The competition is proving beneficial. GE Vernova—Siemens Energy’s top U.S. rival for gas turbines and grid gear—recently upped its outlook as well, pointing to stronger demand from data centers and power projects. The trend isn’t limited to a single supplier. Reuters

The rally has left less margin for missteps. Part of that cash flow comes from customer advance payments, driven by strong order momentum. Siemens Gamesa hasn’t hit consistent break-even yet. And Siemens Energy’s guidance? No allowance for possible legal or regulatory charges down the line.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

Stock Market Today

  • PLS Group Shares Drop A$1.1 Billion Amid Lithium Price Decline
    June 26, 2026, 3:12 PM EDT. PLS Group Limited shares tumbled 6.32% to A$5.04 on June 26, erasing approximately A$1.1 billion in market value. The decline parallels a 6.3% drop in Chinese lithium carbonate futures, a key indicator for lithium pricing, which fell to 145,320 yuan per tonne, ending the week down nearly 10%. Despite 618,302 new shares issued under an employee plan, dilution was not the main driver; instead, the stock's movement mirrored weakening lithium prices. PLS lags the broader S&P/ASX 200 index, which rose 0.18%. Macquarie analysts attribute the lithium price correction to sentiment concerns over supply and technology shifts, though prices remain significantly higher year-to-date. Investors also weighed PLS's recent A$175 million investment decision to expand production at the Pilgangoora project.