Siemens Energy Embarks on European Roadshow to Defend Bull Case as €1bn Buyback and Grid-Tech Deal Fail to Stem 20% Slide
06.06.2026 - 14:45:30 | boerse-global.deSiemens Energy’s management is taking its investor pitch on a multi-city European tour this week, hoping to persuade a sceptical market that a 16.2% monthly rout is a temporary correction rather than a signal of deeper trouble. The roadshow, kicking off in Zurich before hitting Munich on 9 June and later Copenhagen and Stockholm, comes as the shares sit 20% below an April peak of €195.54 — and despite a freshly launched €1bn share buyback programme and a strategic acquisition in grid monitoring.
The buyback, running from 4 June until 30 September with a maximum of 57 million shares, is intended for employee and board compensation and possible cancellation. Yet the market response has been muted: on Friday the stock closed at €155.70, down 2.48% on the day. Adding to the anxiety, the Camlin Group takeover announced on 2 June — a specialist in network surveillance and power-grid digitalisation — has done little to lift sentiment, even though it fits neatly into Siemens Energy’s push toward higher-margin, technology-driven infrastructure revenues.
Technicals flash warning, but long-term trend holds
The chart picture has turned cautionary. The 50-day moving average at €168.46 was breached weeks ago, and on 2 June the stock sliced through its 100-day line. The 200-day average at €135.22, however, remains more than 15% below the current price, keeping the longer-term uptrend technically intact. The relative strength index now sits at 37.0, approaching oversold territory — a level that has historically attracted dip-buyers.
For the near term, the €160 mark has become a psychological battleground. A reclaim of that level could shift momentum back to the upside. Should selling pressure persist, the next support lies around €150, with €155 acting as an immediate floor. So far the year-to-date gain still stands at a respectable 26.8%, but the last 30 days have erased a significant chunk of that advance.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Siemens Energy?
Bullish guidance meets valuation fatigue
Fundamentally, the company is serving up a growth story that would normally command a premium. Management has guided for comparable revenue expansion of 14% to 16% in fiscal 2026, an operating margin (before special items) of 10% to 12%, a net profit of roughly €4bn, and free cash flow before tax of about €8bn. The order backlog is at record levels, and RBC Capital Markets recently highlighted that European capital-goods firms with long business cycles are set to benefit from organic growth this year.
Yet the valuation is stretched. The price-to-earnings multiple of 60.9x towers above the sector average of 28.9x and even the peer median of 41.2x. Analysts at Goldman Sachs remain bullish, lifting their target to €212 with a “buy” rating; JPMorgan holds at “overweight” with a €225 target, pointing to structural demand from AI data-centre grid connections. But Barclays sees the stock at just €110, reflecting the wide dispersion in views. The chasm — a €115 gap between the highest and lowest targets — underscores the uncertainty around execution, particularly at the troubled wind-turbine unit Siemens Gamesa.
External headwinds and the quiet-period deadline
The next major catalyst is the European Central Bank’s interest-rate decision on 11 June. Rising capital costs would be a headwind for a company whose valuation rests on long-term infrastructure contracts. After 1 July, Siemens Energy enters a quiet period ahead of its third-quarter results on 5 August, meaning the window for management to shape the narrative on the roadshow is narrow.
Siemens Energy at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.
With the buyback now underway and a fat order book to point to, the onus is on the roadshow team to convince investors that the record backlog will convert into solid operating earnings — and that the €1bn repurchase programme is more than a symbolic gesture. Whether that message can push the stock back above €160 and rebuild confidence in the weeks ahead will depend on how convincingly the management lays out its case in Zurich, Munich, Copenhagen and Stockholm.
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