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Siemens sees Weakening Demand Trends as Q3 Misses Forecasts

  • Company lowers guidance for digital industries business
  • Sees weakening demand in China
  • Orders decline in all regions as customer buying normalises

ZURICH, Aug 10 (Reuters) - Siemens missed profit forecasts in its latest quarter, the German engineering company reported on Thursday, noting weakening demand in several markets including China.

The trains-to-factory-automation manufacturer said China, long a driver for global manufacturing and its third largest market, had seen only a tepid recovery after its zero-COVID shutdown last year.

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.

Customers globally were running down their stocks of components, Siemens added, a trend expected to continue in the next few quarters.

"In Q3 the normalisation of demand was clearly visible in orders at our short-cycle businesses, most notably in China, but also in Europe," CEO Roland Busch told reporters.

"Recovery in China’s manufacturing sector has been slower than anticipated," he added. "As a result, we expect the trend to stay flat."

For the three months to the end of June, Siemens' industrial profit - covering its mobility, smart infrastructure and factory automation businesses - fell 4% to 2.75 billion euros ($3.02 billion), missing the 2.90 billion euro expected by analysts in a company-compiled consensus.

The company's shares were down 3.6% in premarket activity.

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%.

Order intake in digital industries plunged 37% during the quarter, particularly in the short-cycle factory automation business, Siemens said.

Still, the division increased revenue and profit as it worked through its huge order book, and benefited from higher capacity utilisation at its own factories and the sale of more profitable products.

The fortunes of Siemens, whose products are used to automate factories and equip transport networks, give an insight into the health of the global economy.

Manufacturing activity has been slowing in recent months with weakening purchasing manager data in Europe and China.

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.

Siemens maintained its guidance at group level. It expects comparable revenue growth of 9% to 11% for the 12 months to end-September and earnings per share of 9.60 to 9.90 euros.

($1 = 0.9106 euros)

Reporting by John Revill; editing by Christopher Cushing and Jason Neely

Source: Reuters


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