The most talked-about technology of the decade — artificial intelligence — is turning an unlikely piece of industrial machinery into a strategic asset. Gas turbines, once dismissed as legacy equipment in the energy transition, are being thrust back into the spotlight as the only proven technology capable of delivering the round-the-clock power that AI data centers demand. Siemens Energy is positioning itself at the center of that shift.
The trend crystallised on 22 June, when Chevron and Microsoft announced plans to build a gas-fired power plant in West Texas, dedicated solely to powering an AI data center from 2028. While GE Vernova and Caterpillar’s Solar Turbines were named as equipment suppliers — not Siemens Energy — the project signals a structural move by Big Tech to bypass traditional utility grids and secure its own reliable electricity supply. For any maker of large gas turbines, that opens up a new demand cycle untethered from government subsidies.
Siemens Energy is simultaneously moving to sharpen its own focus. According to Manager Magazin, the group is weighing the sale of another business unit, aiming to concentrate resources almost entirely on its gas turbine operations. The logic is straightforward: shed conglomerate complexity and double down on the infrastructure that is becoming the physical backbone of digitalisation.
The digital side of that strategy got a boost on 24 June, when NAVER Cloud and Korea Siemens signed a partnership to integrate cloud infrastructure with digital twins and AI solutions for manufacturing. The deal underscores that Siemens Energy is not just a hardware provider — it is building a bridge between factory floors and virtual control rooms.
Yet the stock has not been immune to the broader turbulence in AI-related equities. Shares closed at €159.82 on 24 June, roughly 18% below the April peak of €195.54. The recent sell-off accelerated on 23 June, when the Nasdaq 100 dropped 3.3% and GE Vernova — a direct gas turbine rival — tumbled 6.5%. Siemens Energy gave up another 0.56% on the day, bringing its one-month decline to about 10.5%. Even so, the stock remains up 74% year-on-year and has gained roughly 31% since the start of 2026.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Siemens Energy?
Technically, the picture is mixed. The relative strength index sits at 47, neutral territory with no clear overbought or oversold signal. The stock is trying to reclaim its 100-day moving average of €162.51 but currently trades below it. More encouragingly, the price is still well above the 200-day average of €139.34, confirming that the long-term uptrend is intact. That said, the 50-day line at €169.07 is acting as resistance, with the shares now 4.6% beneath it — a level that, if regained, would signal renewed confidence in the AI-energy thesis.
On the home front, political headwinds are building. In Germany, the CDU’s economic council has warned of a potential “energy cap” that could stifle industrial growth, and a cabinet decision on the Energy Efficiency Act was scheduled for 24 June. Tighter domestic regulation could dampen demand for modern energy solutions in Siemens Energy’s home market — a drag that even strong US orders might not fully offset.
The near-term path hinges on two catalysts. First, an official confirmation of the planned divestiture or a major US order would give the growth story concrete backing. Second, the 200-day moving average at €139.34 must hold as support. A decisive move above €169 would be the more powerful signal, showing that the market is once again pricing in the gas turbine-as-AI-backbone narrative rather than questioning it.
Siemens Energy in mid-2026 is no longer a restructuring story. It is a specialist in the making — and the coming weeks will test whether that transformation can withstand a sector-wide drawdown.
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