Siemens overcomes supply snags to post higher profit

Business & Finance
10 Feb 2022 • 7:17 PM MYT
Malay Mail
Malay Mail

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A file photo taken May 8, 2019 shows the logo at the company headquarters building of German industrial giant Siemens in Munich. — AFP pic

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FRANKFURT, Feb 10 — German industrial giant Siemens ploughed ahead in the first quarter, booking an increased net profit despite the supply chain disruptions which have troubled many businesses, it said today.

The group, which makes products ranging from trains to factory equipment, made a profit of €1.8 billion (RM8.7 billion) between September and December last year, up 20 per cent on the same period in 2020.

The company’s revenues over the same period increased by 17 per cent to €16.5 billion, while its orders jumped 52 per cent to a value of €24.2 billion.

Siemens achieved the result “despite a continuing complex macroeconomic environment influenced by the coronavirus pandemic”, the group said in a statement. 

Siemens had also avoided “major disruptions from increased supply chain risks”, it said. 

Widespread bottlenecks — affecting everything from raw materials like wood to key components like semiconductors — have created a drag on industry and limited production.

“We had a very successful start into fiscal 2022,” Siemens CEO Roland Busch said in a statement.

The Munich-based group’s results “impressively demonstrate that we are a leader in accelerating digitalisation and sustainability,” Busch said. 

Siemens, long a producer of heavy industrial equipment, has shifted its focus towards in recent year towards digital industries and the automation of factories.

The new strategy led Siemens to part ways with its energy subsidiary, which was introduced onto the stock market in 2020.

The group announced yesterday it was selling its mail and parcels business to fellow German group Koerber for €1.15 billion, as well as exiting its electric motors joint-venture with Valeo.

In January the group also sold its road signalling subsidiary for €950 million. — AFP