Shares of Siemens Energy declined more than 5% after Morgan Stanley removed the German energy technology company from its most favored investment recommendations. The decision stems from mounting worries about the firm’s substantial business footprint in the Middle East amid escalating regional instability.
Siemens AG, SIE.DE
While maintaining its bullish Overweight designation and €166 share price projection, the Wall Street investment bank indicated that heightened geopolitical volatility warrants a more measured short-term perspective.
The primary worry centers on Siemens Energy’s Gas Services business unit, which has grown increasingly dependent on Middle Eastern demand streams. Saudi Arabia alone contributed approximately 3.6 and 4 gigawatts of orders during fiscal 2025’s second and third quarters respectively, representing substantial portions of the roughly 9 gigawatts secured in each period.
Drawing from McCoy data, Morgan Stanley noted that Middle Eastern markets comprised 35% of Siemens Energy’s gas turbine order volume by capacity throughout 2025. The company itself disclosed total Middle East and Africa order book exposure at €9 billion — approximately 15% of its complete order portfolio.
Looking beyond incoming orders, the investment bank cautioned about possible revenue timing issues affecting both Gas and Grid operations. Should customer site accessibility become compromised, aftermarket service revenues might suffer alongside delayed equipment shipments.
The bank identified an additional risk factor: should Middle Eastern governments reallocate budgets toward military spending, decisions regarding future gas turbine purchases could face postponement.
This repositioning reflects the dramatic transformation in the investment narrative over recent months. Morgan Stanley initially elevated Siemens Energy to top pick status in March 2025. Since that designation, the bank’s 2028 group EBITA projection has surged from €6.2 billion to €9 billion, while Gas Services EBITA margin expectations have climbed from 15% to 21%.
The stock’s market valuation has mirrored this forecast evolution. Shares transitioned from trading at a 35% discount versus European capital goods industry peers on a 2028 EV/EBITA metric to commanding a 10% premium.
This substantial revaluation constrains further upside opportunities going forward. Morgan Stanley’s current 2028 EBITA projection exceeds market consensus by merely 3% — a narrow buffer that reduces potential for meaningful positive surprises.
According to the firm, incoming order announcements, particularly within the Gas division, represent the critical performance indicator markets will scrutinize throughout 2026.
Morgan Stanley continues to project a 26% annual EBITA compound growth trajectory for Siemens Energy spanning 2026 through 2030, supported by its substantial order backlog.
Siemens trades with a market capitalization of $175.88 billion, price-to-earnings ratio of 21.23, and debt-to-equity measure of 86.23.
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