Siemens Energy AG dropped more than 5% on Tuesday after Barclays downgraded the stock to “Underweight,” making it the worst performer on the German DAX for the session. The stock was trading at around €146 at the time of the move, pulling back from a roughly 35% year-to-date gain heading into the day.
Siemens Energy AG, SMEGF
Analyst Vlad Sergievskii at Barclays issued the downgrade alongside a raised price target — up to €130 from €110 — but argued that the higher target still implies meaningful downside from current levels.
The central argument: the market is pricing in a gas turbine supercycle that Barclays doesn’t think can last.
Sergievskii wrote that Siemens Energy received orders equivalent to 50 GW annualised over the past six months. That’s above total global demand in any year from 2017 to 2023. But Barclays puts sustainable long-term demand at just 80–90 GW per year — about 15% below where things stand now.
Siemens Energy’s market share in gas turbines has also climbed to around 40%, well above its historical average of 25–27%. Barclays sees that normalising over time.
The bank is still forecasting strong earnings growth — a 25% EPS CAGR through 2030, with adjusted EPS rising from €4.26 in fiscal 2026 to €9.20 in fiscal 2028. Revenue is expected to grow from €43.24 billion to €57.41 billion over the same period, a 13.7% CAGR.
The issue isn’t the growth trajectory. It’s that Barclays believes peak order intake, peak free cash flow, and peak supply-demand tightness are all converging in 2026 — and the stock is already valued as if those conditions are permanent.
Free cash flow attributable to equity holders is projected to peak at approximately €7.62 billion in fiscal 2026, with around two-thirds of that driven by working capital movements. From 2028, net working capital is expected to become a “material headwind.”
There’s also an ownership obligation hanging over the stock. Siemens Energy faces a marked-to-market commitment of approximately $5 billion to raise its stake in Siemens Energy India to 51% in 2028, which Barclays flagged as a constraint on shareholder returns.
One of the more pointed observations in the note: major gas turbine and engine manufacturers have already secured more than 70 GW of data center-related orders or slot reservations over the past 15–18 months.
Barclays said this effectively covers the next three to four years of data center gas generation equipment needs — suggesting the ordering pace could slow materially from here.
Rival GE Vernova was trading higher on the same day, pointing to this being a Siemens Energy-specific story rather than a sector-wide event. The broader market was also positive, with the S&P 500 up 0.7% and the Nasdaq up 1.1%.
On valuation, Barclays calculated Siemens Energy trades at a 20–35% discount to GE Vernova on forward free cash flow yield and EV/EBITDA — a gap the broker views as narrower than commonly assumed.
Siemens Energy’s next earnings report is due in early August, when order intake figures will be closely watched for early signs of the demand normalisation Barclays is calling.
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