Earnings

Siemens Energy warns of deeper net loss over Russia restructuring

Key Points
  • Siemens Energy warned of a deeper than previously expected net loss in 2022, on a charge of around 200 million euros ($204 million) due to the restructuring of its business in Russia.
  • It said its net loss would exceed the 560 million euro loss in 2021 by the charge, which is reported as a special item.
  • The company is maintaining the turbines of the Nord Stream 1 Portovaya compressor station.
Siemens Energy CEO: No clear timing for when the turbine can be shipped to Russia
VIDEO3:4903:49
Siemens Energy CEO: No clear timing for when turbine can be shipped to Russia

Siemens Energy, which supplies equipment to the power industry, on Monday warned of a deeper than previously expected net loss in 2022, on a charge of around 200 million euros ($204 million) due to the restructuring of its business in Russia.

The company, which is maintaining the turbines of the Nord Stream 1 Portovaya compressor station, said its net loss would exceed the 560 million euro loss in 2021 by the charge, which is reported as a special item.

Siemens Energy, which was spun off from Siemens in 2022 and owns a majority in struggling wind turbine maker Siemens Gamesa, previously expected its 2022 net loss to be on par with last year.

A trader walks next to Siemens Energy AG logos during Siemens Energy's initial public offering (IPO) at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, September 28, 2020.
Ralph Orlowski | Reuters

The group earlier this year said it would stop all new business in Russia in the wake of Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, adding that sales there account for a low single-digit percentage share of its total sales of 28.48 billion euros.

Siemens Energy also pointed to ongoing weakness at Siemens Gamesa as a drag on quarterly results, ahead of a planned 4.05 billion euro cash bid for the remaining 33% it does not already own in the Spanish-listed firm.

"We expect the new management at Siemens Gamesa now to implement a rigorous turnaround plan," Siemens Energy Chief Executive Christian Bruch said, a week after sources told Reuters that the company was weighing 2,500 job cuts.