Siemens Aktiengesellschaft (SIE.DE) Stock Today, 27 November 2025: Sideways Trade, 350,000‑Share Buyback and a New Rail Deal in Chile

Siemens Aktiengesellschaft (SIE.DE) Stock Today, 27 November 2025: Sideways Trade, 350,000‑Share Buyback and a New Rail Deal in Chile

Siemens Aktiengesellschaft shares are treading water on Thursday, 27 November 2025, as investors digest a busy mix of signals: a fresh update on the ongoing share buyback, new analyst target cuts that still come with “Buy” ratings, and a substantial rail contract win for Siemens Mobility in Chile. At the same time, the stock is trading not far below its 52‑week high, backed by record fiscal 2025 results and an ambitious new growth strategy.


Siemens share price today: mild red, strong year‑to‑date

Around 12:30 CET on 27 November 2025, Siemens Aktiengesellschaft (ticker SIE.DE, ISIN DE0007236101) was last quoted at €227.50 on Tradegate, down about 0.24% from Wednesday’s close of €228.05. That puts the stock roughly €26 below its 52‑week high of €253.65, but still well above the 52‑week low of €162.00. Over the past twelve months the share price is up about 26%, giving the group a market capitalisation of roughly €182 billion. [1]

Intraday, Tradegate data show a trading range today between €226.90 and €228.35 on relatively moderate volume of around 12,000 shares. [2] The picture is similar on other venues: German platforms such as Onvista and Börse.de also report Siemens trading close to €227–228, confirming a largely sideways session so far. [3]

From a fundamental snapshot, Wallstreet‑online’s data put Siemens on a trailing P/E of about 20–21, with a dividend of €5.20 per share implying a yield of roughly 2.3% at current prices. The site also calculates a one‑year performance of +26.3% and a consensus analyst target price around €241.64, implying mid‑single‑digit upside from today’s level. [4]

Technically, German portal finanzen.net notes that Siemens recently generated a bullish “GD 200” signal: on 25 November 2025, the share price crossed above its 200‑day moving average, often interpreted as a medium‑term “up” signal. However, the same piece points out that in today’s Xetra trading the stock was slightly weaker, down about 0.2% to roughly €227.70. [5]


350,000‑share buyback in one week keeps capital return in focus

One of today’s most concrete stock‑specific headlines is about Siemens’ share buyback program. A new article on Wallstreet‑online, dated 27 November 2025, summarises an interim notification published by Siemens on 24 November 2025. [6]

Key points from that update:

  • Between 17 and 23 November 2025, Siemens repurchased 350,762 shares on Xetra.
  • On 17 November, about 65,866 shares were bought at a weighted average of €224.88; on 21 November, roughly 73,789 shares were repurchased at an average of €218.42. [7]
  • Since the start of the program on 12 February 2024, Siemens has accumulated a total of 18,544,713 shares via buybacks, executed by a mandated bank exclusively in electronic trading on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. [8]

This continued buyback activity aligns closely with Siemens’ own guidance. In its “ONE Tech Company” strategy press release on 13 November 2025, the company emphasised that share repurchases remain a “core pillar” of shareholder return, alongside a progressive dividend policy that may temporarily allow for a higher payout ratio after deconsolidating Siemens Healthineers. [9]

For investors, the implication is straightforward: buybacks at roughly the current trading range can support earnings per share and the share price, especially if growth in Siemens’ Digital Industries and Smart Infrastructure businesses materialises as planned.


Analyst view: target cuts, but still clear “Buy” signals

Another prominent theme in today’s Siemens coverage is the “Doppelschlag” (double strike) from Wall Street analysts. Austrian outlet Börse Express reports that both Goldman Sachs and Jefferies have cut their price targets for Siemens, but maintain their Buy ratings. [10]

According to the article:

  • Goldman Sachs reduced its 12‑month target from €267 to €246, citing more cautious management guidance, but reiterates “Buy” and portrays the current level as an attractive entry point. [11]
  • Jefferies likewise confirms its Buy recommendation while trimming its target to around €277. [12]

Börse Express frames this as a re‑rating rather than a downgrade: analysts are pricing in a slower 2025 for the key Digital Industries division, but they still highlight Siemens’ structural growth drivers—industrial automation, digitalization and AI—plus the resilience coming from Smart Infrastructure and Mobility. [13]

Across other platforms, the analyst consensus is similarly constructive. Wallstreet‑online’s data show an average price target a little above €241, while German fundamental site Eulerpool calculates an even higher average target of about €256, implying roughly 10–12% upside from today’s levels, along with a P/E around 18–19 based on fiscal 2025 earnings. [14]


Big picture backdrop: record fiscal 2025 and the ONE Tech Company program

Today’s trading and commentary cannot be separated from the strong full‑year numbers Siemens reported earlier this month and the strategic reset it presented on 13 November 2025.

In its Munich press conference introducing the ONE Tech Company program, Siemens announced: [15]

  • Record net income for fiscal 2025 (year ended 30 September):
    • Net income rose 16% to €10.4 billion, a new all‑time high for the third year in a row.
    • Free cash flow hit €10.8 billion, also a record. [16]
  • Revenue growth on a comparable basis of 5% to €78.9 billion, with orders up 6% and a book‑to‑bill ratio of 1.12, signalling a robust order pipeline. [17]
  • A proposed dividend increase from €5.20 to €5.35 per share, continuing Siemens’ progressive dividend policy. [18]
  • A new mid‑term ambition for revenue growth of 6–9% (excluding Siemens Healthineers), and an expectation of high single‑digit EPS growth before purchase price allocation. [19]
  • An ambition to double digital business revenue by 2030, with more than €1 billion of investment to scale AI over the next three years and around 1,500 AI experts already working across the company. [20]

At the same time, Siemens is planning to deconsolidate Siemens Healthineers, focusing the group more tightly on core industrial, infrastructure and mobility markets. [21] Credit rating agency S&P Global has affirmed Siemens’ long‑term rating at ‘AA‑’ with a stable outlook, explicitly taking into account the decision to give up control of Healthineers while maintaining a conservative financial policy. [22]

Not everything has been flawless. An earnings call transcript from 13 November 2025 highlights that Siemens missed consensus expectations for Q4 2025: EPS came in at $2.08 vs. a forecast $2.55, and revenue of $21.43 billion was slightly below the expected $21.55 billion. The stock initially dropped by about 5.3% in pre‑market trading on those numbers. [23] The subsequent weeks have therefore been about re‑pricing expectations rather than questioning the overall growth story.


New contract win: Siemens Mobility to digitalise rail in Chile

On the corporate news side, Siemens gave investors a fresh indication today that the Mobility business continues to generate growth opportunities worldwide.

A new press release dated 27 November 2025 announces that Siemens Mobility has secured a “landmark” contract in Chile to digitalise rail infrastructure on two key lines: Tren Alameda‑Melipilla (61 km) and Tren Santiago‑Batuco (26 km), together covering 87 kilometres. [24]

Highlights from that announcement:

  • Siemens will deliver ETCS Level 2 signalling—the first deployment of ETCS L2 technology in Chile, and the first project in Latin America built on Siemens’ new Signaling X platform. [25]
  • The system is designed to be cloud‑ready, cyber‑secure and scalable, integrating interlockings, signalling and control systems in a virtualised data centre environment, with data availability for future AI applications. [26]
  • Siemens Mobility will be responsible for engineering, supply, installation and commissioning over a five‑year project period, followed by ten years of maintenance. [27]

For the stock, the Chile deal is not about immediate, material earnings in 2025, but it reinforces the narrative Siemens is pushing: using digital and AI‑enabled platforms to modernise critical infrastructure worldwide, building recurring service and software revenues on top of large hardware projects.


UK focus: Goole Rail Village visit underlines mobility investment and jobs

Also dated 27 November 2025, Siemens’ UK media centre reports that Lee Pitcher, the Member of Parliament for Doncaster East and the Isle of Axholme, visited Siemens Mobility’s Goole Rail Village in East Yorkshire. [28]

The article notes that:

  • Siemens Mobility is investing up to £240 million in the Goole site, which spans 67 acres—roughly the size of 35 football pitches. [29]
  • The facility is expected to create up to 1,000 direct jobs and around 1,700 supply chain opportunities in the region by 2030. [30]
  • Goole is already assembling 80% of the next generation of London Underground Piccadilly line trains, and Siemens intends to assemble future battery bi‑mode trains there—technology that could help the UK eliminate new diesel passenger trains on many unelectrified routes. [31]

While this UK‑focused story is more about industrial footprint and politics than near‑term earnings, it reinforces Siemens Mobility’s role as a growth and employment engine and supports the thesis that rail and rolling stock remain core, well‑invested businesses within the group.


How all of this fits together for Siemens shareholders today

Putting today’s pieces together, the 27 November 2025 Siemens story looks like this:

  • Price action: The stock is slightly lower on the day, but sits near the upper end of its 12‑month range and well above long‑term averages, with technical indicators such as the 200‑day moving average now turning supportive. [32]
  • Capital return: The company is actively shrinking its share count, having bought back more than 18.5 million shares since early 2024 and another 350,000+ shares just last week, while also proposing a dividend increase. [33]
  • Growth narrative: Siemens has laid out a clear mid‑term plan to grow revenue 6–9% and double its digital business by 2030, underpinned by record 2025 earnings and strong free cash flow. [34]
  • Execution risk: The recent earnings miss and softness in Digital Industries show that even strong industrial players are not immune to inventory cycles and macro uncertainty. That’s why analyst targets are coming down, even if ratings stay positive. [35]
  • Order momentum: Fresh project wins like the Chile rail signalling contract and continued investment in hubs such as Goole reflect healthy demand in Mobility and Smart Infrastructure, helping to offset cyclical weakness elsewhere. [36]

For long‑term investors, today’s mix of news tends to support the view that Siemens remains a high‑quality, moderately valued industrial tech group with strong balance sheet metrics (including an AA‑ rating), a growing digital software footprint, and a shareholder‑friendly capital allocation policy. [37]

For short‑term traders, however, the message is more nuanced: analysts have lowered the ceiling on near‑term upside by cutting price targets, and the stock is already pricing in a fair amount of good news after its double‑digit rally over the past year. Volatility around macro data, industrial demand and any further guidance updates from Siemens management is likely to remain elevated.


Key Siemens Aktiengesellschaft stock facts on 27 November 2025

Based on public data available at midday CET:

  • Last price (Tradegate): ~€227.50, ‑0.24% vs. previous close of €228.05 [38]
  • Intraday range:€226.90 – €228.35 [39]
  • 52‑week range:€162.00 – €253.65 [40]
  • Market capitalisation: approx. €182.3 billion [41]
  • Dividend (last paid):€5.20 per share; proposed for fiscal 2025: €5.35 [42]
  • Dividend yield (current price): about 2.3% [43]
  • Net income (fiscal 2025):€10.4 billion, up 16% year‑on‑year [44]
  • Free cash flow (fiscal 2025):€10.8 billion, a record high [45]
  • Consensus target price range: approx. €242 – €256, depending on the source [46]

Disclaimer

Siemens Energy announces €6B share buyback through 2028 - Byte News Daily

References

1. www.wallstreet-online.de, 2. www.wallstreet-online.de, 3. www.onvista.de, 4. www.wallstreet-online.de, 5. www.finanzen.net, 6. www.wallstreet-online.de, 7. www.wallstreet-online.de, 8. www.wallstreet-online.de, 9. press.siemens.com, 10. www.boerse-express.com, 11. www.boerse-express.com, 12. www.wallstreet-online.de, 13. www.boerse-express.com, 14. www.wallstreet-online.de, 15. press.siemens.com, 16. press.siemens.com, 17. press.siemens.com, 18. press.siemens.com, 19. press.siemens.com, 20. press.siemens.com, 21. press.siemens.com, 22. www.spglobal.com, 23. www.investing.com, 24. press.siemens.com, 25. press.siemens.com, 26. press.siemens.com, 27. press.siemens.com, 28. news.siemens.co.uk, 29. news.siemens.co.uk, 30. news.siemens.co.uk, 31. news.siemens.co.uk, 32. www.finanzen.net, 33. www.wallstreet-online.de, 34. press.siemens.com, 35. www.investing.com, 36. press.siemens.com, 37. www.spglobal.com, 38. www.wallstreet-online.de, 39. www.wallstreet-online.de, 40. www.wallstreet-online.de, 41. www.wallstreet-online.de, 42. www.wallstreet-online.de, 43. www.wallstreet-online.de, 44. press.siemens.com, 45. press.siemens.com, 46. www.wallstreet-online.de

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