Siemens Energy’s stock has climbed roughly 38% since the beginning of the year, and a flood of fresh business suggests the rally has further to run. The company booked a record €17.7 billion in orders during the second quarter of its 2026 fiscal year, pushing the total backlog to €154 billion. Management has already lifted its full-year guidance, now targeting comparable revenue growth of 14% to 16%, a net profit of around €4 billion, and free cash flow before taxes of about €8 billion.
One particularly striking win came from Texas, where Spanish engineering firm TSK confirmed Siemens Energy will supply three SGT6-5000F gas turbines for a power plant in Amarillo. The facility is being built for developer Fermi America, which ultimately plans to install more than 11 GW of capacity in the region to feed the insatiable electricity demand of AI data centers. Gas-fired generation is enjoying a renaissance as a reliable bridge between renewables and the constant load of digital infrastructure, and Siemens Energy is squarely in the middle of that trend.
The market is also warming to a more structural catalyst. Deutsche Bank analyst Gael de-Bray reiterated a buy rating with a €200 price target over the weekend, highlighting the potential spin-off of the “Transformation of Industry” division, which bundles compressors and steam turbines. Analysts value that unit at roughly €12.4 billion. Shedding it would sharpen Siemens Energy’s margin profile and narrow the valuation discount to competitors such as GE Vernova.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Siemens Energy?
Against that upbeat backdrop, two mechanical market adjustments took effect on Monday that could have rattled less resilient stocks. Index provider STOXX removed Siemens Energy from the DAXplus Minimum Variance Germany index, a purely methodological change that does not affect the company’s membership in the blue-chip DAX. Separately, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved a new ratio for the company’s American Depositary Shares: from Monday afternoon, each ADR will represent exactly one-fifth of an ordinary share, a reconfiguration that is not a classic stock split. Neither move alters the fundamental investment case; they merely trigger rebalancing by index-tracking funds and a technical adjustment in the depositary system.
The share price shrugged off the noise. Siemens Energy last traded at €170.30, extending its weekly gain to just over 10%. That leaves the stock comfortably above its medium-term signal line of €169.36, while the 200-day moving average sits nearly 23% lower, underscoring the strength of the long-term uptrend. The 50-day average of €169.31 is now a minor support level; a clean break above it would open the path toward the 52-week high of €195.54.
Investors will get the next update on June 29, when Siemens Energy holds a pre-close call to discuss current business trends. With a record order book, a potential portfolio simplification, and a wave of AI-driven demand, the company looks to have plenty of momentum independent of any index reshuffling.
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