Siemens improves its full-year forecast after beating revenues in the second quarter.

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Siemens (SIEGn.DE) boosted its full-year revenue and profit predictions on Wednesday, after the German industrial and technology major outperformed expectations in the second quarter.

The manufacturer of items ranging from trains to industrial software was upbeat, buoyed by a vast order book that was still growing and a further reduction in supply chain bottlenecks.

Continued strong demand also aided its factory automation and smart buildings divisions to their highest-ever quarterly profit, while the mobility business, which includes trains, rolling stock, and transportation systems, returned to profit after suffering a loss due to the group’s withdrawal from Russia last year.

“We had a very successful first half-year,” Chief Executive Roland Busch told reporters.

“We now want to further leverage our exceptional order backlog and execution strength. This means that – despite a volatile environment – we’re very confident about the second half-year.”

The company now expects comparable revenue growth of 9% to 11% in the 12 months to the end of September, up from its previous outlook for an increase of 7% to 10%.

Siemens also expects to increase its underlying basic earnings per share to a range of 9.60 euros to 9.90 euros, up from the 8.90 euros to 9.40 euros it forecast in February.

The company had already raised its full-year outlook in February, citing strong demand and its massive order backlog, which increased to 105 billion euros ($115.58 billion) in the second quarter.

The raised guidance came after Siemens reported its second quarter revenue jumped by 14% to 19.42 billion euros ($21.38 billion). Analysts in a company-compiled poll had expected 18.59 billion euros.

Industrial profit in the three months to the end of March rose 47% to 2.61 billion euros, missing forecasts for 2.70 billion euros.

BROAD INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY

The results of Siemens, whose sensors, controllers and software are used in factories, transport systems and buildings, are seen as indicators for the health of the broader industrial economy.

The results underline the recent upward trend in global industry reflected in results by rivals including ABB (ABBN.S) and Alstom (ALSO.PA).

Siemens’s net income almost tripled to 3.55 billion, helped by the company booking a non cash gain of 1.59 billion euros from reversing an impairment charge related to its investment in Siemens Energy.

The company would also likely announce later this year its plans to invest its remaining 31.9% stake in Siemens Energy (ENR1n.DE).

Siemens remained committed to exiting completely, and its pension fund had already sold its 9.9% stake, CFO Ralf Thomas told reporters.

Siemens shares were 2.1% higher in early trading at 152.56 euros.

“This is a straightforward, operational beat and

raise, driving further upgrades that reflect broad-based strong momentum in demand and execution,” said JP Morgan analyst Andrew Wilson. “We expect the shares to outperform today.”

($1 = 0.9084 euros)

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