Siemens Energy gets boost from record orders

Reuters

Published Nov 16, 2022 06:04

Updated Nov 16, 2022 11:28

By Christoph Steitz and Alexander Hübner

MUNICH (Reuters) -Siemens Energy on Wednesday reported a record order backlog of nearly 100 billion euros ($104 billion), boosting its shares and overshadowing a widening net loss blamed on the its struggling wind turbine division Siemens Gamesa.

Siemens Energy, which provides services and equipment to the power sector such as gas and wind turbines, said its order backlog grew 4.3% to 97.4 billion euros in its financial year to the end of September.

The rise was mainly driven by its gas and power business, which caters to conventional energy assets such as gas-fired power plants, where orders grew by nearly a quarter.

Fourth-quarter sales also rose by 5.9% to 9.2 billion euros, beating the 8.8 billion Refinitiv estimate, driven by stronger demand for Siemens Energy's energy grid services and equipment.

Calling the 2022 fiscal year a "perfect storm", Chief Executive Christian Bruch said the gas and power business delivered solid results, while Siemens Gamesa was chiefly responsible for a wider annual net loss of 647 million euros.

The shares hit a 12-week high following the results and were up 6.8% at 1026 GMT, the biggest gain among German blue-chips, despite the group's decision to scrap dividend payouts for 2022 in the wake of the loss.

In 2022-2023, Siemens Energy expects its net loss to narrow significantly and sales to grow 3%-7%, after a 2.5% decline in 2021-2022. Siemens Energy expects to become profitable in 2024, to be followed by Siemens Gamesa a year later.

Siemens Energy is banking on its 4.05 billion euro bid for the remaining third it does not already own in Siemens Gamesa to better integrate the division and fix quality issues at a next-generation turbine model.

"The integration of Siemens Gamesa will help to improve profitability at our wind business and allow it to deliver to its full potential," Bruch said.

He also hinted at possible changes to Siemens Energy's shareholder structure, where former parent Siemens AG (ETR:SIEGn) holds a direct 35% stake, an overhang Bruch says is a source of concern among investors and is weighing on the group's stock.