Siemens' net profit drops over 37 pc to Rs 408 crore in March quarter

IANS May 13, 2025 183 views

Siemens posted a 37% slump in Q2 net profit to Rs 408 crore, citing muted private Capex and project delays. Despite this, new orders surged 44% thanks to government infrastructure spending. CEO Sunil Mathur remains optimistic about automation demand recovery. The company had reported strong 21.5% profit growth in the previous quarter.

"In spite of the challenging macro environment, our Order Income grew by 44% driven by mobility and smart infrastructure businesses." – Sunil Mathur, Siemens CEO
New Delhi, May 13: Technology conglomerate Siemens Ltd on Tuesday reported over 37 per cent decline in its net profit at Rs 408 crore in January-March quarter, from Rs 649 crore in the year-ago period.

Key Points

1

Profit drop linked to under-absorption in Digital Industries

2

Order backlog rose 7% to Rs 5,305 crore

3

Mobility business offsets weak private Capex

4

FY24 Q1 profit had risen 21.5% YoY

Revenue remained flat due to the ongoing normalisation of demand in digital industries and due to normal project delivery schedules in the Mobility business, the company said in its stock exchange filing.

The decline in profit from operations was due to under absorption and higher cost of material in the Digital Industries business.

Additionally, the profit was impacted by an extraordinary gain of Rs 192 crore from the sale of property in Q2 FY 2024 and demerger expenses of Rs 63 crore in the current quarter, informed the company.

The company follows an October-September cycle, which makes the January-March period its second quarter (Q2).

“In spite of the challenging macro environment, our Order Income grew by 44 per cent driven by our mobility and smart infrastructure businesses where we see continued public Capex spending on infrastructure,” said Sunil Mathur, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Siemens Limited.

The company, a leading technology company focused on industry, infrastructure and mobility, said that the short cycle ‘Digital Industries’ business, however, continues to be impacted by muted private Capex spending.

“As private Capex picks up locally and globally, the demand for automation and digitalisation solutions will also increase, as technology has proven to be key to sustainable growth for industry and infrastructure,” said Mathur.

In the March quarter, new orders rose 44 per cent to Rs 5,305 crore and order backlog grew by 7 per cent.

In its earlier quarter (Q1), Siemens had reported a 21.5 per cent year-on-year increase in net profit at Rs 614.6 crore, compared to Rs 505.7 crore in the same period in FY24.

Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Not surprising given the global economic slowdown. Many MNCs are facing similar challenges. The 44% order growth is promising though - shows our infrastructure push is benefiting companies like Siemens. Hope private capex picks up soon 🤞
P
Priya M.
As an investor, I'm concerned about the profit drop but the order backlog growth gives some comfort. The mobility sector seems to be doing well - good sign for Make in India initiative. Will hold my shares for now.
A
Amit S.
The numbers look bad but we must see the context - extraordinary gains last year and demerger expenses now. The core business seems stable. German companies are usually conservative in their reporting, so I trust their long-term vision.
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Sanjana R.
Interesting how public capex is driving growth while private investment lags. Shows our infra push is working but industries are still cautious. Hope the new government continues infrastructure focus - it's creating jobs and business opportunities.
V
Vikram J.
The 37% drop looks alarming but seems temporary. The order book growth is impressive! As someone in automation industry, I can confirm digitalization demand will bounce back. Siemens products are top quality - worth the wait for recovery.
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Neha T.
Mixed feelings about this. While the profit drop is concerning, the mobility sector growth shows our railways/metro investments are paying off. Maybe Siemens should focus more on government projects until private investment recovers? Just a thought.

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