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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
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Siemens N Ord | SIE | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
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87.84 | 87.84 |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 09/4/2023 07:50 by grupo guitarlumber Apparently the next divi forecasted for January 2024must check EDIT SEEMS CORRECT AS DIVI RECENTLY PAID IN FEBRUARY 2023 |
Posted at 09/4/2023 07:43 by waldron Upcoming events on LEONARDO S.P.A.May/02/23 Shareholders Meeting - First Call May/03/23 Q1 2023 Earnings Call May/03/23 Q1 2023 Earnings Release May/10/23 Shareholders Meeting - Second Call May/22/23 Ex-dividend day for final dividend |
Posted at 09/4/2023 07:38 by waldron Seems good value although dividend lowAppears toppy at present but might break thru resistance during the week due to positive news |
Posted at 11/11/2021 09:16 by gibbs1 Siemens AG said Thursday that fourth-quarter revenue and orders rose as it posted growth in its industrial businesses.The German industrial company's net income was 1.17 billion euros ($1.34 billion), compared with EUR1.76 billion the previous year, although last year's figure included around EUR800 million from discontinued operations resulting mainly from the spinoff of Siemens Energy. Net income in the 2021 fiscal year jumped to EUR6.16 billion from EUR4.03 billion, it said. Revenue in the quarter rose 18% to EUR17.44 billion, rising 10% on a like-for-like basis, with a book-to-bill ratio of 1.09, the company said. The Munich-based company said it had orders valued at EUR19.07 billion, up from EUR15.10 billion a year earlier, driven by double-digit growth in all industrial businesses. Its closely watched adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization at its industrial businesses was EUR2.27 billion, it said. The figure was below analysts' expectations of EUR2.45 billion, although revenue came in above views at EUR16.82 billion, according to estimates provided by the company. Analysts predicted fourth-quarter orders at EUR17.56 billion. Siemens said it would propose to increase its dividend to EUR4.00 a year from EUR3.50 a year earlier, reflecting its strong performance in fiscal 2021. Write to Ed Frankl at edward.frankl@dowjon (END) Dow Jones Newswires November 11, 2021 01:54 ET (06:54 GMT) |
Posted at 15/7/2021 10:05 by grupo guitarlumber SIEMENS AG (SIE)Real-time Estimate Quote. Real-time Estimate Tradegate - 07/15 05:03:52 am 131.33 EUR -1.67% |
Posted at 03/2/2021 15:14 by gibbs1 FEB/03/2021 Annual General MeetingFEB/03/2021 Q1 2021 Earnings Release FEB/04/2021 Ex-dividend day for final dividend |
Posted at 17/12/2020 07:42 by grupo guitarlumber Financial CalendarUpcoming Events JAN/12/2021 Commerzbank Conference FEB/03/2021 Annual General Meeting FEB/03/2021 Q1 2021 Earnings Release FEB/04/2021 Ex-dividend day for final dividend |
Posted at 12/11/2020 12:50 by waldron Among European equities, Siemens dropped 2.7% after the German industrial giant cut its dividend and said its quarterly revenue declined. |
Posted at 09/6/2020 08:41 by florenceorbis 6/08/2020 | 09:13pm BSTCredit Suisse is positive on the stock with a Buy rating. The target price has been raised to EUR 145 from EUR 125. |
Posted at 20/11/2017 21:07 by ariane Energy Majors Hit Hard By Climate RegulationsBy Leonard Hyman & William Tilles - Nov 20, 2017, 3:00 PM CST Power They say that bad news come in threes. The headlines one day this past week certainly gave credence to that notion—at least for the fossil fuel business. The first news came out of Siemens, a Munich-based industrial conglomerate somewhat akin to the troubled General Electric. After last week’s disastrous news from GE—a 50 percent dividend cut and plans for a complete corporate makeover—we shouldn’t have been surprised. GE’s difficulties weren’t just due to poor business conditions. There has also been too much financial engineering and a history of overpaying for acquisitions. But Siemens made a purely business announcement: It was laying off 6,900 workers due to weak demand for gas turbine electric generators. The industry has the capacity to produce 400 big units per year worldwide, but is producing only 100, and Siemens doesn’t expect demand to bounce back. You can find Leonard Hyman's lastest book ‘Electricity Acts’ on Amazon Understand that the gas turbine is the most efficient and economic fossil fuel generator. And replacement of old coal-fired generation by gas turbines made a major contribution to carbon emission reductions. So, what’s the problem? First, growth in electric sales volume—particu Related: OPEC Chairman: Output Cuts Are The ‘’Only Viable Option’’ Second, the Norwegian state sovereign wealth fund, the biggest in the world, has decided to exit its oil investments. There is, of course, no small irony in this development because Norway built up the fund with revenue from the country’s oil fields. Nor in Norway closing its oil fields to help mitigate global warming. Their central bank, which supervises the fund, says that it’s not prudent for Norway (which already relies heavily on oil revenues) to, in effect, double up on the risk by investing oil revenues in various oil stocks. They are just advocating for more portfolio diversification. The bank claims that this decision has nothing to do with its thoughts about the future or sustainability of the oil business; it’s just a matter of portfolio management. Yet, the central bank could have made the same portfolio judgment years ago, and it should have, based on the expressed line of reasoning. So, the question we’re now left with is, do the Norwegians now have our doubts about the oil business? The third item was unveiled at the UN climate conference in Bonn, Germany. The UK and Canada announced a pledge to end coal-fired power generation by 2030. France, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Portugal, New Zealand, Washington State, Ontario and Alberta have pledged support. This withdrawal from coal raises a technology and manufacturing question. There are only a few worldwide electrical equipment manufacturers, like GE and Siemens discussed above. They build products for worldwide markets, not niche or isolated markets. Related: Can Oil Majors Continue To Beat Estimates? Isolated markets with idiosyncratic demands are often left to self-manufacture equipment that has no market elsewhere. Those markets also lose the benefits of economies of scale and standardization (a reason that Britain’s technical love affair with equipment suitable to its own peculiar market needs left the British electricity industry so far behind for so long). You can find Leonard Hyman's lastest book ‘Electricity Acts’ on Amazon These news items serve as a stark warning. Internationally, the market has turned against the most economical of fossil-fueled electric generating equipment. Also, large institutional investors who have benefitted greatly from fossil fuel investments in the past are having second thoughts. And finally, we might be looking at a date certain to end coal-fired electric generation in much of the world. Despite the U.S.'s best efforts, it was a bad week for carbon. By Leonard Hyman and Bill Tilles for Oilprice.com |
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