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15 November 2023, Bavaria, Munich: Flags with the word "Siemens" in front of the company's headquarters. Comparable orders meanwhile declined 15% from the same quarter a year ago, hitting 19.8 billion, Siemens said. Siemens CEO Roland Busch told CNBC on Thursday that the company's performance during the quarter was "very, very strong." The company attributed its growth in the third quarter to strong demand in its electrification and industrial software businesses, but noted the automation business remained "challenging." There was an "exceptionally high order growth in the software business driven by a number of large contract wins for licensed software," the company said, with profitability growth more than offsetting a profit decline in automation.
Persons: Karl, Josef Hildenbrand, Roland Busch Organizations: Siemens, Getty Images, CNBC, Smart Infrastructure Locations: Bavaria, Munich, London
Karl-Josef Hildenbrand | Picture Alliance | Getty ImagesGerman technology giant Siemens on Thursday reported a drop in profit at its industrial business in the fiscal second quarter and said its automation division had slowed. The company's industrial profit came in at 2.51 billion euro ($2.73 billion) in the three months ending in March, down 2% from the same quarter last year. The figure was also below the company-compiled analyst forecast of 2.68 billion euro which was reported by Reuters. Net income fell to 2.2 billion euro in the three months to the end of March, down 38% year-on-year, while sales shed 1% to 19.16 billion euro. watch nowSiemens focuses on automation and digitalization and produces technology for a range of sectors such as transport and healthcare.
Persons: Karl, Josef Hildenbrand, Roland Busch, CNBC's Annette Weisbach, Busch Organizations: Getty, Siemens, Reuters Locations: Bavaria, Munich, London
Siemens reported first-quarter profit slightly ahead of expectations on Thursday despite the German engineering group seeing a slowdown at its flagship factory automation unit. Digital Industries, which supplies companies with software and controllers to operate their production lines, saw new orders fall by a third as market conditions weakened. Customers who built up stocks of components to avoid shortages last year also held off buying new equipment and decided to run down their stocks, Siemens said. The downturn was seen most strongly in Asia and Australia, due particularly to weakening demand from China, it added. "We anticipate regional differences in the way customers ultimately reduce their inventories to normal levels," Chief Executive Roland Busch told reporters.
Persons: Roland Busch Organizations: Siemens, Digital Industries Locations: Asia, Australia, China, U.S, Germany
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration Acquire Licensing RightsDec 4 (Reuters) - Intel (INTC.O) and Siemens (SIEGn.DE) on Monday announced a three-year deal to collaborate on improving factory efficiency and automation with a special focus on improving energy efficiency and sustainability. The partnership with Siemens will help Intel operate the factory more efficiently, Esfarjani said. EUV, an energy-hungry technology, is so central to advanced chipmaking that significant parts of the manufacturing process revolve around it. The partnership with Intel will help Siemens deepen its understanding of this type of manufacturing where one technology is so core to the process and help it transfer that know-how to other industries. In that case, Siemens assisted with its transition to manufacturing electric vehicles from combustion engines.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Keyvan Esfarjani, Esfarjani, EUV, Cedrik Neike, Max A, Edwina Gibbs Organizations: REUTERS, Intel, Siemens, Monday, Reuters, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Mercedes, Benz, Thomson Locations: San Francisco
Exterior view of the Siemens Forum, part of the Siemens Headquarters, in Munich, Germany. Siemens on Thursday posted a 10% rise in revenue growth for its fiscal fourth quarter to a record high of 21.4 billion euros ($23.2 billion), beating forecasts, but expects a slowdown in 2024. Industrial profit grew 7% to a record 3.4 billion euros in the fourth quarter, above a company-compiled forecast of 3.34 billion euros, to notch a record high of 11.4 billion euros for the year. Net income was 1.9 billion euros for the quarter, taking the full-year figure to a historic high of 8.5 billion euros, while free cash flow also notched a record 10 billion euros for the full year. Siemens proposed to increase its dividend from 4.25 euros per share a year earlier to 4.70 euros per share.
Persons: Roland Busch Organizations: Siemens Forum, Siemens, Digital Industries, Industrial Business Locations: Munich, Germany, China
Siemens is case study in China de-risking dilemma
  + stars: | 2023-10-04 | by ( Pamela Barbaglia | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +9 min
That’s unsettling for the likes of Siemens, $62 billion carmaker Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE) and $39 billion chemicals group BASF (BASFn.DE). Factor in the German group’s 32% stake in Siemens Energy (ENR1n.DE) and 75% holding in Siemens Healthineers (SHLG.DE), currently worth 46 billion euros, and it adds up to 156 billion euros. The unit and Siemens’ Airport Logistics unit, which press reports say could be another divestment candidate, may only be worth 4 billion euros combined. Moreover, Kaeser already tried to boost Siemens’ valuation by partially spinning off subsidiaries. As of September, Siemens had bought back 2.5 billion euros of shares since starting a 3 billion euro share repurchase programme in November 2021.
Persons: Roland Busch, France’s Legrand, Busch, Joe Kaeser, he’s, Kaeser, Germany’s Bundesbank, Siemens, Goldman Sachs, Judith Wiese, George Hay, Oliver Taslic Organizations: Reuters, Siemens, Germany’s, Barclays, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Volkswagen, BASF, Software, Dassault, Automation, ABB, Smart Infrastructure, Siemens Energy, Siemens ’ Mobility, France’s Alstom, CRRC Corporation, Siemens ’ Airport Logistics, Siemens Healthineers, Toshiba Corp, Energy, BNP, Bloomberg, Financial Times, Thomson Locations: China, Brussels, Beijing, Germany, EMEA, Swiss, Middle Kingdom, Republic, Shenzhen, Sichuan, Chengdu, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand
Sven Hoppe/Pool via REUTERS/File PhotoSummaryCompanies Company lowers guidance for digital industries businessSees weakening demand in ChinaOrders decline in all regions as customer buying normalisesZURICH, Aug 10 (Reuters) - Siemens (SIEGn.DE) missed profit forecasts in its latest quarter, the German engineering company reported on Thursday, noting weakening demand in several markets including China. Siemens said it was now seeing a "normalisation of demand" after customers pre-bought last year to avoid shortages. During its third quarter, Siemens orders rose 10% to 24.24 billion euros, beating forecasts of 22.19 billion euros. Revenue rose 6% to 18.89 billion, missing forecasts for 19.27 billion euros. Net profit of 1.44 billion euros also missed forecasts.
Persons: Roland Busch, Sven Hoppe, John Revill, Christopher Cushing, Jason Neely Organizations: Siemens, ZURICH, Thomson Locations: Munich, Germany, China, Europe
Siemens’ spreading rot obscures elusive value
  + stars: | 2023-08-10 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
REUTERS/Mike BlakeLONDON, Aug 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Siemens’ (SIEGn.DE) problems are no longer affecting just its periphery. Shares in its spun-out unit Siemens Energy (ENR1n.DE) have lost more than 40% this year due to faulty wind turbines. Chief Executive Roland Busch pointed the finger at China, saying slowing demand in Siemens’ third biggest market was to blame. Siemens shares fell as much as 7% on the news. Siemens shares are now trading over 30% below JPMorgan’s valuation based on a sum of the parts calculation.
Persons: Mike Blake LONDON, Roland Busch, Busch, Pamela Barbaglia, Neil Unmack, Oliver Taslic Organizations: Siemens, Coaster, REUTERS, Reuters, Siemens Energy, West, Twitter, Thomson Locations: Oceanside , California, U.S, China, Chengdu, Shenzhen
Siemens missed profit forecasts in its latest quarter, the German engineering company reported on Thursday, noting weakening demand in several markets including China. Siemens said it was now seeing a "normalisation of demand" after customers pre-bought last year to avoid shortages. Orders increased by 10% during the three months to the end of June, down from the 13% increase in the previous three months. Siemens kept its group-level outlook for the year to September-end but lowered expectations for its digital industries business which supplies factories with controllers. The division, seen by analysts as the jewel in Siemens's crown, now expects comparable revenue growth of 13% to 15%, lower than its previous outlook of 17% to 20%.
Persons: Roland Busch, CNBC's Arabile, Busch, I'm Organizations: Siemens Locations: China
Jung Yeon-je | Afp | Getty ImagesSouth Korea's dominance in the memory chip market and a robust artificial intelligence ecosystem gives it an advantage in the global AI chip race, said industry observers. South Korea dominating in the memory market is definitely an advantage," said James Lim, senior research analyst at Dalton Investments. "South Korea seeks to emerge as a prominent player in rapidly growing and promising areas such as AI semiconductors," said Lee. "South Korea has a robust local AI ecosystem, capable of competing with global tech giants," said Sung Nako, executive for large scale AI development at South Korean internet giant Naver. ChatGPT maker OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman had urged South Korea to lead AI chip production during his meeting with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol in June.
Persons: Jung Yeon, James Lim, Lee, Dylan Patel, SemiAnalysis, ., TrendForce, Sung Nako, Sam Altman, Yoon Suk, Altman, Dalton's Lim, Geoffrey Cain Organizations: Getty, Dalton Investments, CNBC, Samsung, SK Hynix South, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, Science, Micron, South, South Korean, Nvidia, Intel Locations: Seoul, Korea, South Korea, China, U.S
Siemens plans new plant in Singapore in Asia expansion
  + stars: | 2023-06-13 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
BERLIN, June 13 (Reuters) - Siemens (SIEGn.DE) plans to build a new plant for its industrial automation division in Singapore, the company said on Tuesday, as it expands its business in Asia to serve booming orders for automation technology. "Siemens intends to build a new, state-of-the-art Digital Industries (DI) factory in Singapore - as part of its strategy to strengthen global diversification and resilience," a spokesperson for the company told Reuters. The company will announce further details of its plans on Thursday, the spokesperson said. The project's price tag is estimated to be at a low three-digit million-euro sum, Wirtschaftswoche magazine, which first reported the news, said, citing company sources. Reporting by Alexander Huebner and Riham Alkousaa; Editing by Sharon SingletonOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Siemens, Roland Busch, Wirtschaftswoche, Alexander Huebner, Sharon Singleton Organizations: Siemens, Digital Industries, Reuters, Thomson Locations: BERLIN, Singapore, Asia, China, Amberg, Germany
The company had already raised its full-year outlook in February, citing strong demand and its massive order backlog, which increased to 105 billion euros ($115.58 billion) in the second quarter. The raised guidance came after Siemens reported its second quarter revenue jumped by 14% to 19.42 billion euros ($21.38 billion). Analysts in a company-compiled poll had expected 18.59 billion euros. Industrial profit in the three months to the end of March rose 47% to 2.61 billion euros, missing forecasts for 2.70 billion euros. The group's industrial profit includes gains made by its digital industries, smart infrastructure, mobility and health care businesses, which form the core of its operations.
ZURICH, May 17 (Reuters) - Siemens (SIEGn.DE) raised its full year sales and profit guidance on Wednesday after the German engineering and technology group beat sales forecasts during its second quarter. The raised guidance came after Siemens reported its second quarter revenue jumped by 14% to 19.42 billion euros ($21.38 billion). Analysts in a company-compiled poll had expected 18.59 billion euros. Industrial profit in the three months to the end of March rose 47% to 2.61 billion euros, missing forecasts for 2.70 billion euros. The group's industrial profit includes gains made by its digital industries, smart infrastructure, mobility and health care businesses, which form the core of its operations.
Siemens raised its full year sales and profit guidance on Wednesday after the German engineering and technology group beat sales forecasts during its second quarter. The raised guidance came after Siemens reported its second quarter revenue jumped by 14% to 19.42 billion euros ($21.38 billion). Analysts in a company-compiled poll had expected 18.59 billion euros. Industrial profit in the three months to the end of March rose 47% to 2.61 billion euros, missing forecasts for 2.70 billion euros. The group's industrial profit includes gains made by its digital industries, smart infrastructure, mobility and health care businesses, which form the core of its operations.
Siemens raises outlook after Q2 sales beats forecasts
  + stars: | 2023-05-17 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
ZURICH, May 17 (Reuters) - Siemens (SIEGn.DE) raised its full year sales and profit guidance on Wednesday after the German engineering and technology group beat sales forecasts during its second quarter. The company had already raised its full-year outlook in February, citing strong demand and its massive order backlog, which increased to 105 billion euros ($115.58 billion) in the second quarter. The raised guidance came after Siemens reported Q2 revenue increasing by 14% to 19.42 billion euros. Analysts in a company gathered consensus of forecasts had expected 18.59 billion euros. Industrial profit in the three months to the end of March rose 47% to 2.61 billion euros, missing forecasts for 2.70 billion euros.
Leonardo, Siemens sign deal to create cybersecurity platform
  + stars: | 2023-04-06 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
[1/2] Leonardo CEO Alessandro Profumo speaks to reporters at the foreign press association in Rome, Italy, April 12, 2022. REUTERS/Guglielmo MangiapaneROME, April 6 (Reuters) - Leonardo (LDOF.MI) and Siemens (SIEGn.DE) on Thursday said they signed a memorandum of understanding to offer cybersecurity solutions for infrastructure in the energy, oil and gas and industrial sectors. "Leonardo and Siemens can create new synergies based on complementary technologies and skills," Leonardo CEO Alessandro Profumo said. Giuliano Busetto, the head of Siemens Digital Industries, said the goal was to help Italy in its digital transformation and create further value for the national industry. Reporting by Angelo Amante; editing by Jason NeelyOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Siemens said it expects full-year revenue growth in the range of 7% to 10%. BERLIN— Siemens AG, the German electronics and mobility firm, said net earnings in the first three months of its business year fell, but that it was raising its outlook for the current fiscal year on the back of strong revenue and orders. The Munich-based industrial and technology company said digital industries and infrastructure businesses, which provide equipment, software and services for factories, buildings, electricity grids, and other infrastructure, made a big contribution to revenue and earnings growth in the company’s fiscal first quarter. Siemens’s business year ends on Sept. 30.
Chief Executive Roland Busch said the company had made its strongest ever start to a financial year, helped by its working through an order backlog which stood at a record 102 billion euros. Smart Infrastructure - which makes products to automate and control buildings - also raised its sales and profit margin guidance. During the October to December period, Siemens said its revenue had increased 8% to 18.1 billion euros, matching estimates. Shareholders' net profit fell to 1.48 billion euros, in line with forecasts. Fellow industrial automation company Rockwell Automation last month reported a 9.9% increase in first quarter organic sales, and raised its sales growth outlook.
Overly loose fiscal and monetary policy during Covid-19 was a "mistake," according to the chief investment officer of asset management firm Antipodes Partners. I think, though, we're probably in a different regime where we have to expect greater volatility around not just inflation but economic growth," he said. So we think there's a fair amount of downside on the S & P EPS [earnings per share] numbers." "The digital industries business is a really good software-hardware factory automation business, and decarbonization is all about reengineering supply chains. So a lot of investment is required, and Siemens I think benefits from that," he said.
Siemens to separate out 3 bln euro motors and drives business
  + stars: | 2022-11-17 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
ZURICH, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Siemens (SIEGn.DE) will combine five of its businesses into an independent motors and drives company with revenue of around 3 billion euros ($3 billion), Chief Executive Roland Busch said on Thursday. The German engineering company said its large drives applications and Sykatec, a metal component maker and also part of its portfolio companies, will be joined together. "We're convinced that this integrated motors and large drives provider - with high value creation - will be significantly stronger and more resilient than each business would be if it operated independently." The new company would have 14,000 employees and operate in a market for electrification and power conversion estimated to be worth around 20 billion euros, Siemens said. Siemens will remain active in the industrial motors business via its servo motors business, which makes motors for robots and integrated production lines.
TOKYO, Nov 11 (Reuters) - Japan said on Friday it will invest up to 70 billion yen ($500 million) in a new semiconductor company led by tech firms including Sony Group Corp (6758.T) and NEC Corp (6701.T) as it rushes to re-establish itself as a lead maker of advanced chips. The new chip company will be named Rapidus and aims to begin making chips in the second half of the decade, he added. Japan is also concerned that China may attempt to take control of Taiwan, the global hub for advanced chip production. In July Japan also offered a 93 billion yen subsidy to help memory chip makers Kioxia Corp and Western Digital Corp (WDC.O) expand output in Japan. In September it pledged to give U.S. chipmaker Micron Technology (MU.O) $46.5 billion yen so it can add production capacity at its plant in Hiroshima.
Siemens signs deal to supply equipment for gigafactories JV
  + stars: | 2022-10-13 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Gigafactories is a generic term referring to facilities that produce batteries for electric vehicles on a large scale. Under the deal, Siemens will become ACC's preferred supplier for automation, digitalisation and electrification technology. Terms of the partnership, which is part of the Siemens Xcelerator open digital platform launched earlier this year, have not been revealed. "ACC uses virtually the entire spectrum of Xcelerator - from factory construction to production automation to building services," Siemens managing board member Cedrik Neike told Reuters. Siemens on Thursday also announced a deal with electric vehicle company Volta Trucks to deliver electric charging infrastructure for truck customers, to help the transition to electrified vehicles.
Visitors walk under a Siemens sign at the international consumer technology fair IFA in Berlin, Germany September 2, 2022. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File PhotoSept 26 (Reuters) - Siemens Digital Industries Software, a unit of Siemens AG (SIEGn.DE), on Monday said it launched new software called Tessent Multi-die that automates a design process for testing chips made with advanced packaging. But testing these chips after they are made has been difficult as there are several layers of tiles, and Siemens’ head of the Tessent business Ankur Gupta said until now Siemens has had to work with customers on a case-by-case basis. He said making the testing process easier for chips with advanced packaging, also referred to as 2.5 and 3-dimensional packaging, will help give the new technology a boost. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com RegisterReporting by Jane Lanhee Lee; Editing by Stephen CoatesOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Devices running Google Assistant account for 46% of the smartphones equipped with personal assistants, but by 2022, Google will expand its market share to exceed 60%. Google will further strengthen its lead in the market as more of the Android installed base gains access to Google Assistant. Google Assistant is compatible with Android devices running an unforked version of Android 6.0 Marshmallow or newer. Although Google has a massive global reach, with approximately 2 billion active Android devices, just under half are currently compatible with Google Assistant. As more Android devices upgrade to software that is compatible with Google Assistant, Google will be able to increase its share in the market for smartphones with built-in voice assistants.
Persons: Apple's Siri, Samsung's Bixby, Bixby, Alexa, Jessica Smith Organizations: Intelligence, Google, Baidu, Android, Samsung, Alexa, BMW, Nissan, Insider Intelligence, Business
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