Stanley Druckenmiller
"Schneider is one of the cleanest ways in Europe to express the global electrification + AI infrastructure capex cycle with a credible bridge to recurring digital revenue. The company is demonstrating the right kind of growth (Systems acceleration, services expansion, software ARR growth), and management is explicitly targeting higher quality earnings (digital >70% of revenues by 2030; software/services to ~25%; recurring revenues doubling) while supporting shareholder returns (buyback) and pruning the portfolio. From a Druckenmiller lens, the trade is not about cheapness—it’s about being on the right side of the dominant macro impulse (power scarcity + AI buildout + grid capex). The main issue is timing and asymmetry: at a premium multiple, you want to enter on weakness and be willing to size up when the market gives you a narrative-driven drawdown, not when the story is universally loved. Current levels near the 200-day average are acceptable for a starter position, but the “bet big” moment likely comes on a sharp, headline-driven selloff that doesn’t change backlog fundamentals."
Overview
A Druckenmiller-style, top-down macro and reflexivity-driven assessment of Schneider Electric (SU.PA): identifying where we are in the cycle, which secular themes are dominating capital flows (AI power buildout, electrification, grid capex), how the stock’s narrative can self-reinforce, and where positioning offers asymmetric risk/reward—along with how to size and hedge.
Macro Context
We are late-cycle to mid-cycle depending on geography: the U.S. is still running a capex/AI-infrastructure cycle with strong nominal growth, while parts of Europe are constrained by energy availability, permitting, and slower industrial momentum. Central banks are likely in a transition phase: restrictive policy remains a headwind for rate-sensitive residential construction, but the next meaningful macro swing is the market’s discounting of easing/normalization and what that does to duration equities and industrial capex. The dominant secular trend is an electricity/compute arms race: AI workloads are forcing hyperscalers, colocation, and “neo-cloud” entrants to expand data center capacity, and that expansion is gated by power distribution, cooling, and grid interconnection. This creates a multi-year demand impulse for electrical equipment, systems integration, and lifecycle services. Parallel secular tailwinds: (1) grid modernization/resilience amid outages and renewables integration; (2) electrification of industry and buildings for efficiency; (3) regionalization/multipolarity pushing “multi-hub” supply chains and localized production; (4) software + services attachment as industrial firms monetize installed base. Geopolitically, tariffs and fragmentation matter because they (a) change cost curves and pricing actions, (b) shift capex geographically, and (c) increase the value of regional manufacturing footprints. Europe’s constraint is not demand; it’s execution bottlenecks (land/power/permitting) which delays conversion of order pipelines into revenue for data centers.
Company Position in Macro Landscape
Schneider sits at the center of the AI-electrification nexus. It is a direct picks-and-shovels beneficiary of (i) data center power distribution and cooling (“grid-to-chip” and “chip-to-chiller”), (ii) grid modernization including SF6-free switchgear ahead of regulatory shifts, and (iii) broader building/industrial efficiency capex. The company’s own disclosures show Systems growing very fast (Q2 +17% organic; Q3 +19% organic), which is exactly what you expect when data centers and infrastructure projects are driving mix. At the same time, Schneider is not purely secular: it has cyclical sensitivity through residential buildings and discrete automation. Management flagged ongoing residential weakness in North America and China earlier in 2025, though Q3 commentary suggests some stabilization outside those regions. Industrial Automation returned to growth in Q3 (+6% organic) with discrete recovery translating into sales—important because it reduces the “one-engine” risk of being overly dependent on data centers. Financially/valuation-wise (as-of 2026-01-23): price ~€230.75; market cap ~€129.7B; trailing P/E ~28.7; forward P/E ~23.2; P/B ~4.81; dividend yield ~1.69%. This is a premium multiple industrial—justified only if the market believes (a) data center demand is durable, and (b) the mix shift to digital/recurring revenue is real. Management’s CMD targets (7–10% organic revenue CAGR through 2030, +250 bps EBITA margin expansion 2026–2030, digital >70% of revenues by 2030, buybacks €2.5–3.5B) are designed to keep that premium narrative intact.
Reflexivity Analysis
Positive feedback loop (bull case): AI buildout → power constraints become binding → customers prioritize proven suppliers with end-to-end offers → Schneider wins larger “systems + services + software” bundles → mix shifts to higher value content and recurring services → earnings visibility improves → multiple stays elevated → cheaper equity cost of capital supports buybacks and selective M&A → reinforces leadership and market share. This is classic reflexivity: fundamentals improve because capital markets validate the story and management invests behind it. Key self-reinforcing evidence in 2025: Systems growth (+17% Q2, +19% Q3) and data center strength repeatedly cited; AVEVA ARR +12% (June and Sept 2025); management emphasized positive book-to-bill and rising backlog organically (Q3 call). The CMD plan to push digital/recurring revenues above 70% by 2030 and software/services to ~25% is a deliberate attempt to “software-ize” an industrial multiple. Negative feedback loop (bear case): If AI/data center capex slows (hyperscaler digestion, power constraints, regulation, or financing costs) → systems mix reverses and pricing power weakens → margins disappoint (already pressured by mix and FX in H1’25) → the market stops paying a premium industrial multiple → de-rating compresses valuation faster than earnings can grow → management’s buyback becomes less impactful relative to multiple compression. Sentiment/positioning risk: Schneider has become an ‘AI infrastructure’ beneficiary in Europe, attracting thematic flows. That increases crash risk on any narrative shock (e.g., “AI capex peak” headlines). The stock being ~15% below the 52-week high but still on premium multiples suggests the market is willing to pay up, yet not euphoric—an environment where timing matters: you want to buy on macro/narrative drawdowns, not chase into strength.
Competitive Position & Disruptive Threats
Moat: broad portfolio spanning LV/MV distribution, UPS, automation, software (EcoStruxure, AVEVA), and services—allowing end-to-end solutions and higher attachment rates. Morningstar rates Schneider as a wide-moat name (supportive of durability). The company’s multi-hub strategy and regional investments also match the geopolitical trend of supply-chain localization. Competitive landscape: large incumbents (Siemens, ABB, Eaton, etc.) remain credible, and pricing pressure exists in specific geographies (China deflation noted in Q3 call). However, data center projects tend to consolidate among a handful of trusted vendors; management stated the competitive set for large AI-factory-like deployments remains small. Disruptive threats: (1) technology shifts in data center power architecture (e.g., HVDC, new cooling modalities) can change winners—Schneider is attempting to stay in front via partnerships (e.g., NVIDIA collaboration referenced in company materials) and Motivair acquisition for liquid cooling; (2) software transition risk at AVEVA (management expects margin drag during transition, with improvement as conversion completes by 2027); (3) execution bottlenecks in Europe (power availability, permitting) can shift demand to other regions; (4) commoditization risk in products if pricing power fades, especially in deflationary China.
Asymmetric Risk/Reward
Upside: If the market internalizes that (a) data center demand is not a 12-month spike but a multi-year, power-constrained buildout, and (b) Schneider converts this into recurring services/software and margin expansion, the stock can compound even at a premium multiple. CMD targets (7–10% organic CAGR + 250 bps margin expansion) plus buybacks create a credible path to double-digit EPS compounding into 2030. Downside: Premium valuation creates convex downside if the narrative breaks. With trailing P/E ~28.7 and forward P/E ~23.2, a modest de-rating to a market-average industrial multiple could overwhelm 1–2 years of earnings growth. The H1’25 margin pressure (gross margin down 90 bps organic; EBITA margin -10 bps organic) shows the operating model is not immune to mix/FX/tariff timing. Entry point: current price (~€230.75) is near the 200-day average (~€228.28) and slightly below the 50-day (~€233.7), suggesting a more balanced technical entry than buying near highs. However, the stock had a recent strong move (+13.02% shown), so risk/reward improves materially on pullbacks tied to macro or “AI capex scare” headlines. Optionality: (1) multi-year buyback (€2.5–3.5B) provides a persistent bid; (2) portfolio pruning (€1–1.5B revenue divestments by 2030) can lift quality/margins; (3) India JV full ownership increases exposure to a structurally faster-growing market (but also raises leverage/financing considerations). Best asymmetry setup: own Schneider as the quality compounder in electrification/AI power, but hedge the key macro beta (AI capex / industrial multiple compression) via pairs/sector hedges rather than exiting the secular winner.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
AI/data center capex normalization or delay (especially if power availability and permitting prevent conversion of demand into executed projects), causing systems growth to slow, mix to worsen, and the market to de-rate the premium multiple.
Secondary Risks
- Margin and cash flow volatility: mix shift to Systems plus FX headwinds and tariff timing can compress margins and reduce FCF conversion (H1’25 FCF was weak vs prior year, partly one-offs but also working capital).
- China deflation / pricing pressure and broader industrial cycle risk: deflationary pricing in China and any renewed discrete automation slowdown could hit the non-data-center parts of the portfolio.
What Would Change My Mind
I would turn materially more cautious if (1) management starts signaling negative book-to-bill or sustained backlog decline in data centers, (2) we see repeated margin disappointments inconsistent with the +250 bps 2026–2030 margin expansion ambition, or (3) the market’s AI power buildout thesis shifts from ‘power constrained’ to ‘demand constrained’ (i.e., cancellations rather than delays).
Investment Details
Sizing Recommendation
Medium
Time Horizon
1-2 years
Key Catalyst
Evidence that data center demand remains strong while margins inflect upward (via pricing catch-up vs tariffs/inflation and improving software mix), validating the 2026–2030 +250 bps margin expansion and sustaining the premium multiple.
Research Sources (22 found)
Schneider Electric Earnings: Strong Results Led by Double ...
Published: 7/31/2025
Schneider Electric (SU) investor relations material
Published: 12/12/2025
2025 Half Year Financial results
Published: 7/31/2025
Half Year 2025 Results
Published: 7/31/2025
Top 30 Global Ideas for 2025 - Fourth Quarter Update
Published: 10/2/2025
What is Competitive Landscape of Schneider Electric Company?
Published: 12/7/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 2025 Revenues presentation
Published: 10/29/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 2025 Revenues
Published: 10/29/2025
2025 Half Year Presentation
Published: 7/30/2025
Q3 2025 Schneider Electric SE Corporate Sales Call on October 30, 2025 / 7:30AM
Published: 10/31/2025
Schneider Electric Announces $4B Buyback, Margin Increase
Published: 12/11/2025
Schneider Electric Highlights Strategic Growth at Capital Markets Day
Published: 12/11/2025
UPDATE 1-Schneider Electric unveils $4 billion share buyback, pumps up margin forecast
Published: 12/11/2025
Schneider Electric SE
Published: 12/11/2025
Exclusive: Schneider Electric’s CEO on how he’s rebuilding the 189-year old energy giant for the AI era
Published: 10/22/2025
Schneider Electric Consensus Estimates - Post-Q3 2025 release
Published: 11/12/2025
Schneider Electric shares fall on margin, cash flow weakness By Investing.com
Published: 8/6/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 Revenues Up; Sees FY25 Organic Revenue, Margin At Low-end Of View; Stock Down
Published: 10/30/2025
Schneider Electric (ENXTPA:SU): Evaluating Valuation After Recent Share Price Dip
Published: 11/9/2025
Schneider Electric to host a Capital Markets Day
Published: 9/1/2025
2025 Half Year Presentation
Published: 7/30/2025
Securing European energy security and competitiveness through electrification | Schneider Electric
Published: 9/8/2025
Search Queries Generated
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA quarterly earnings results revenue growth margins guidance
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA competitive position market share competitors moat advantages
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA CEO strategy capital allocation governance insider activity
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA bear case analysis risks concerns challenges
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA macro catalysts industry trends regulatory impact upcoming events
Warren Buffett
"Schneider Electric looks like the kind of business Buffett admires: essential products and services, embedded in customers’ operations, with strong competitive positioning and a growing recurring/digital component. The company is aligned with durable tailwinds—electrification, grid modernization, energy efficiency, and AI/data-center infrastructure. Management has laid out sensible long-term targets and a shareholder return plan. The obstacle is not business quality—it is the price. At around €230, the stock trades at a premium earnings multiple for an industrial company, leaving limited room for error. With modest dividend yield and buybacks that may not be meaningfully accretive at current valuations, future returns may depend primarily on continued high execution and sustained market enthusiasm. For a long-term investor, this is a fine business to own, but not obviously a bargain today. A meaningful pullback—creating a clear margin of safety—would improve the attractiveness materially."
Overview
This report examines Schneider Electric S.E. (SU.PA) through a Warren Buffett-style lens: whether the business is understandable, possesses a durable economic moat, is run by shareholder-oriented managers, maintains financial strength, and—most importantly—whether today’s market price offers a sensible discount to a conservatively estimated intrinsic value.
Business Understanding
Schneider Electric is a global provider of energy management and industrial automation solutions—hardware, systems, software, and services—sold into buildings, data centers, infrastructure, and industry. The underlying business is understandable: help customers distribute, control, and optimize electrical power and industrial processes, increasingly with software and services layered on top. What makes it “Buffett-friendly” is that electricity distribution and automation are essential, recurring needs, and Schneider sells into a broad installed base. The complexity is not in the concept but in execution: project-driven systems, global supply chains, and a growing software mix (AVEVA, ETAP, RIB) introduce more moving parts. Still, for an investor comfortable with high-quality industrials, Schneider is within a reasonable circle of competence.
Economic Moat Analysis
Schneider appears to have a wide moat (consistent with third-party moat assessments), built on several reinforcing advantages: 1) Installed base + switching costs: In power distribution, building management systems, industrial control, and data-center electrical/cooling infrastructure, customers value reliability, standards compliance, service coverage, and lifecycle support. Once Schneider equipment and software are embedded in facilities, switching is disruptive and risky. 2) Brand and trust in mission-critical environments: Data centers, grids, hospitals, and industrial plants are intolerant of failure. Brand reputation and proven performance matter disproportionately. 3) Ecosystem and distribution reach: Schneider operates with a massive partner ecosystem and global footprint, supporting customers across 100+ countries. This scale is hard for smaller competitors to replicate. 4) Intangible assets and software platform: EcoStruxure plus AVEVA (and related digital twins, monitoring, and optimization) deepen customer integration, increase recurring revenue, and reduce price-only competition over time. 5) Cost and scope advantages: Global scale in procurement, manufacturing, and R&D (with stated ambition to lift R&D to ~7% of sales by 2030) supports product breadth and innovation. Moat durability outlook: Good. Electrification, grid modernization, energy efficiency, and data-center buildouts are long-lived tailwinds. The primary moat risk is not demand disappearance but margin pressure from mix (systems vs products), competitive pricing in certain regions (notably China deflation), and execution in software transitions. Overall moat view: Wide and durable, though returns will still be cyclical at the edges due to construction/residential and discrete automation cycles.
Management Quality
Management communication and targets appear clear and measurable, with explicit long-term goals (7–10% organic revenue CAGR through 2030, +250 bps adjusted EBITA margin expansion from 2026–2030, and ROCE ambition of 15–20%). Capital allocation priorities are articulated as progressive dividends, systematic buybacks (€2.5–3.5bn through 2030), selective M&A, and portfolio pruning (planned divestments of €1–1.5bn revenue by 2030). Shareholder friendliness: Dividends are meaningful (trailing annual dividend €3.90; ~1.69% yield at ~€230.75). A multi-year buyback program is a positive signal, but (as Buffett would note) buybacks only create value when done below intrinsic value. Capital allocation discipline: Mixed but generally constructive. The acquisition of the remaining 35% of the India JV for €5.5bn increases ownership in a high-growth region, but it also increases net debt and raises the bar for returns. Management has emphasized maintaining investment-grade ratings. Transparency: Quarterly and half-year disclosures provide detailed bridges on margins and cash flow drivers (tariffs, raw materials, FX, mix, working capital), which is a positive sign. Overall: Capable and strategy-driven, with explicit shareholder return frameworks; the key test will be execution on margin expansion and cash conversion while integrating acquisitions and managing FX/tariff headwinds.
Financial Strength
Using provided structured data and company disclosures: Profitability and returns: - Book value per share: 47.98; Price-to-book: 4.81 (market expects strong returns on equity/assets). - H1 2025 adjusted EBITA margin: 18.2% (down slightly due to gross margin and FX headwinds), with FY2025 guidance implying ~18.7%–19.0%. - Segment profitability (H1 2025): Energy Management adjusted EBITA margin 21.5%; Industrial Automation 13.7%. Earnings power: - EPS (TTM): 8.04; Forward EPS: 9.95. - Valuation multiples: trailing P/E 28.7; forward P/E 23.2. Cash flow: - H1 2025 free cash flow: €474m (down due to a one-time fine and working capital/inventory build); management expects stronger H2 and “approaching 100% conversion” for FY2025. Balance sheet: - Net debt at June 30, 2025: €11.984bn (up from €8.147bn at Dec 31, 2024), driven by dividend outflow, acquisitions, and other items. - Credit rating: Moody’s upgraded to A2 (stable) in 2025, indicating solid access to capital. Quality of business model mix: - Software & Services are growing double-digit in quarters cited, and AVEVA ARR growth reported at +12% (mid-2025 and Q3 2025), supporting a more resilient, recurring revenue profile over time. Overall financial strength: Good, but not “no-debt” Buffett style. Schneider carries meaningful net debt and is sensitive to FX. The key comfort is investment-grade ratings and historically strong operating profitability. The risk to watch is whether cash conversion consistently supports dividends, buybacks, and M&A without pushing leverage higher.
Intrinsic Value Assessment
Buffett would anchor on conservative earnings power and owner earnings, then demand a margin of safety. Starting point (per-share economics): - Current price (EUR): 230.75 - EPS (TTM): 8.04 - Forward EPS: 9.95 A practical “earnings power” approach (since full owner-earnings inputs like D&A and maintenance capex are not fully provided here): - If we treat forward EPS (~€9.95) as a reasonable near-term earning power and assume long-term compounding driven by 7–10% organic growth targets (but haircut to ~6–7% to be conservative due to FX, mix, cycles), then an investor is effectively paying ~23x forward earnings. Intrinsic value (multiple-based, conservative range): - For a wide-moat industrial with rising software/services mix, a fair long-term multiple might be ~18–22x normalized earnings (not a rule, but a sobriety check). - Applying this to forward EPS €9.95 yields: - Low case (18x): ~€179 - Mid case (20x): ~€199 - High case (22x): ~€219 Under this conservative framework, today’s €230.75 price is above the mid-to-high end of the range and offers little margin of safety. Cross-checks from external valuation anchors in the provided materials: - Morningstar fair value estimate (Jul 31, 2025): €236 (suggesting roughly fair value at that time). - Simply Wall St narrative cites fair value around €264 (more optimistic), while its DCF model is reportedly more cautious. My Buffett-style interpretation: - Schneider is a wonderful business. - The question is the price. - At ~€231, the stock looks closer to “fair to slightly expensive” on conservative assumptions, especially given: (a) elevated P/E for an industrial; (b) recent margin pressures from mix/tariffs/FX; (c) increased leverage after acquisitions. Margin of safety at current price: - Using the conservative intrinsic range (€179–€219), the margin of safety is negative. - Using a more optimistic intrinsic anchor (e.g., ~€236), margin of safety is small (~2%). That is not the kind of cushion Buffett typically requires. Bottom line on intrinsic value: A high-quality compounding business, but the current quote does not clearly offer a wide margin of safety. A more attractive entry would likely be meaningfully below ~€200 unless one has high conviction that margin expansion and digital/recurring mix will sustainably lift normalized earnings faster than conservative estimates.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
Valuation risk (multiple compression): At ~23x forward earnings and ~29x trailing earnings, even strong operational performance may not translate into strong shareholder returns if the market’s valuation multiple normalizes downward.
Secondary Risks
- Execution risk in margin expansion: Management targets +250 bps adjusted EBITA margin expansion (2026–2030). Mix shifts toward Systems, tariff/inflation timing, and China deflation could delay or dilute these gains.
- Balance sheet and capital allocation risk: Net debt increased materially in H1 2025 and the India JV buyout is large (€5.5bn). If cash conversion disappoints or integration underperforms, leverage could constrain buybacks and flexibility.
What Would Change My Mind
I would become more constructive at today’s price if (1) Schneider demonstrates sustained higher normalized earnings power (e.g., clear evidence that recurring software/services and pricing discipline lift margins and reduce cyclicality), and (2) free cash flow conversion consistently approaches management’s stated ~100% of net income without working-capital surprises. Conversely, I would turn more negative if margin expansion stalls while leverage rises, or if data-center demand proves more cyclical than expected.
Investment Details
Hold Period
10+ years
Research Sources (22 found)
Schneider Electric Earnings: Strong Results Led by Double ...
Published: 7/31/2025
Schneider Electric (SU) investor relations material
Published: 12/12/2025
2025 Half Year Financial results
Published: 7/31/2025
Half Year 2025 Results
Published: 7/31/2025
Top 30 Global Ideas for 2025 - Fourth Quarter Update
Published: 10/2/2025
What is Competitive Landscape of Schneider Electric Company?
Published: 12/7/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 2025 Revenues presentation
Published: 10/29/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 2025 Revenues
Published: 10/29/2025
2025 Half Year Presentation
Published: 7/30/2025
Q3 2025 Schneider Electric SE Corporate Sales Call on October 30, 2025 / 7:30AM
Published: 10/31/2025
Schneider Electric Announces $4B Buyback, Margin Increase
Published: 12/11/2025
Schneider Electric Highlights Strategic Growth at Capital Markets Day
Published: 12/11/2025
UPDATE 1-Schneider Electric unveils $4 billion share buyback, pumps up margin forecast
Published: 12/11/2025
Schneider Electric SE
Published: 12/11/2025
Exclusive: Schneider Electric’s CEO on how he’s rebuilding the 189-year old energy giant for the AI era
Published: 10/22/2025
Schneider Electric Consensus Estimates - Post-Q3 2025 release
Published: 11/12/2025
Schneider Electric shares fall on margin, cash flow weakness By Investing.com
Published: 8/6/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 Revenues Up; Sees FY25 Organic Revenue, Margin At Low-end Of View; Stock Down
Published: 10/30/2025
Schneider Electric (ENXTPA:SU): Evaluating Valuation After Recent Share Price Dip
Published: 11/9/2025
Schneider Electric to host a Capital Markets Day
Published: 9/1/2025
2025 Half Year Presentation
Published: 7/30/2025
Securing European energy security and competitiveness through electrification | Schneider Electric
Published: 9/8/2025
Search Queries Generated
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA quarterly earnings results revenue growth margins guidance
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA competitive position market share competitors moat advantages
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA CEO strategy capital allocation governance insider activity
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA bear case analysis risks concerns challenges
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA macro catalysts industry trends regulatory impact upcoming events
William O'Neil
"Schneider Electric has many traits of a big-cap institutional favorite: dominant franchises, secular growth exposure (data centers, electrification), and a credible long-term plan with margin expansion goals and buybacks. That said, CAN SLIM is ruthless about timing and earnings power. The available EPS evidence (H1 2025 adjusted EPS down 1% reported) does not clear O’Neil’s 25%+ hurdle, and the stock is not acting like a fresh leader (trading below the 52-week high and around the 50/200-day lines). In classic O’Neil terms, Schneider looks more like a high-quality ‘watchlist’ candidate than an actionable breakout buy today. Investors following CAN SLIM would typically wait for (1) a strong earnings acceleration catalyst, (2) a proper base with tight price action, and (3) a breakout to new highs on decisive volume during a confirmed market uptrend."
Overview
This report is a William J. O’Neil-style (CAN SLIM) growth stock analysis of Schneider Electric S.E. (SU.PA), combining earnings power, new-cycle catalysts (AI/data centers, software/recurring), and key price/volume behavior to judge whether the stock is acting like a potential institutional-quality leader or a late-stage laggard.
Financial and Business Overview
Schneider Electric is a global industrial technology leader in electrification, energy management, automation, software, and services, with meaningful exposure to secular growth drivers: AI/data centers, grid modernization, electrification, and building efficiency. Recent operating performance has been solid on revenues but mixed on margins and near-term EPS momentum. In H1 2025, Group revenues were €19.336bn (+7.9% organic) with adjusted EBITA €3.510bn (+6.9% organic) and adjusted EBITA margin 18.2% (down ~10bps organic) impacted by adverse mix, FX, and pricing lag versus inflation/tariffs. Adjusted EPS was €3.97 vs €4.01 (reported -1%, +5.5% organic). Free cash flow fell to €474m (vs €889m) due to working capital build and a one-time fine, with management expecting stronger H2 conversion. Q3 2025 revenues were €9.721bn (+9.0% organic), showing continued strong demand in Energy Management (+9.7% organic) and a return to growth in Industrial Automation (+6.0% organic). From the provided market snapshot (as_of 2026-01-23), the stock trades at €230.75 with market cap ~€129.7bn, trailing P/E ~28.7 and forward P/E ~23.2; TTM EPS €8.04 and forward EPS €9.95. Dividend yield is ~1.69% (trailing annual dividend €3.90).
Market Position & Competitive Advantages
Schneider’s competitive position is strong, with broad product depth, a major installed base, and a differentiated stack spanning hardware + software (EcoStruxure, AVEVA) + services, allowing cross-selling and recurring revenue expansion. Management explicitly targets a higher mix of digital/recurring revenues (>70% of Group by 2030), and sees data centers growing 12–14% CAGR (2025–2030) with expanding software/services attachment. The company also holds sustainability leadership credentials (e.g., repeated recognition as “most sustainable”), which can be a procurement advantage in Europe and with large global customers. Key advantages: - Secular tailwinds: AI/data center buildout, power distribution and resiliency, liquid cooling (Motivair), grid investment, and electrification. - Platform and ecosystem leverage: EcoStruxure + AVEVA, plus partnerships (e.g., NVIDIA) and services expansion (including the launch of SE Advisory Services). - Global scale and multi-hub regionalization strategy to manage supply chain, tariffs, and customer proximity. Key risks/constraints: - Industrial Automation cyclicality and mixed regional demand (China deflationary pricing; Europe data center project constraints). - Margin sensitivity to mix (Systems growing faster than Products/Software), FX headwinds, and the timing gap in pricing vs inflation/tariffs. - Increased leverage from acquisitions and India JV buyout (net debt rose to €11.984bn at June 30, 2025). - Data center “lumpiness” and execution constraints in Europe due to power availability/permits.
Stock Performance
From the provided quote snapshot (as_of 2026-01-23), SU.PA is €230.75, about -15.2% below its 52-week high (€272.25) and +34.6% above its 52-week low (€171.50). The stock is near its 200-day average (200d ~€228.28, price +1.08%) and slightly below its 50-day average (50d ~€233.7, price -1.26%), suggesting consolidation rather than a clean uptrend. Average daily volume is ~0.80–0.83 million shares, but exact day-of volume and accumulation/distribution cannot be confirmed from the provided dataset. The proximity to moving averages indicates the stock is in a potential “support/decision” area: constructive if it tightens and rebounds on higher volume; negative if it breaks 200-day support with heavy volume. O’Neil-style technical note: the stock is not at new highs (a preferred CAN SLIM condition). It would need to build a proper base and show a decisive breakout above key resistance with strong volume to qualify as a classic buy point.
CAN SLIM Analysis
Current Quarterly Earnings Per Share (EPS) Growth:
Does not currently meet the classic CAN SLIM threshold. The latest disclosed comparable in the provided sources is H1 2025 adjusted EPS €3.97 vs €4.01 (reported -1%; +5.5% organic). This is far below O’Neil’s preferred +25%+ EPS growth, and it is not clear from the supplied data that recent quarterly EPS is accelerating. Management guidance targets adjusted EBITA growth of +10% to +15% organic for FY2025, but that is not the same as EPS acceleration. Bottom line: earnings growth is positive on an organic basis but not in the high-velocity category CAN SLIM demands for leading breakouts.
Annual Earnings Increases:
Insufficient 5-year EPS series is provided to verify a clean 5-year annual uptrend in reported EPS. However, multiple sources characterize Schneider as a high-quality compounder with consistent organic growth and margin ambitions. The company set long-range targets for 7–10% organic revenue CAGR through 2030, +250 bps EBITA margin expansion (2026–2030), and 15–20% ROCE, suggesting management expects continued long-term earnings power. From the valuation snapshot: forward EPS €9.95 vs TTM €8.04 implies ~24% forward EPS increase, supportive but not a verified 5-year record in this dataset.
New Products, Management, or Price Highs:
Strong on the ‘N’ (New) factor, weaker on the ‘Price Highs’ portion. Key catalysts include: (1) AI/data center demand and liquid cooling expansion (Motivair), (2) acceleration toward software/recurring revenues with AVEVA subscription transition, (3) partnerships such as NVIDIA for AI factory architecture and digital twins, (4) SE Advisory Services launch as a services platform expansion, (5) strategic plan targets: 7–10% organic revenue CAGR to 2030 and +250 bps EBITA margin expansion 2026–2030, and (6) a sizable €2.5–€3.5bn buyback plan through 2030. Management change is also relevant: Olivier Blum became CEO in late 2024 and is driving a faster, more regionalized operating model. However, the stock is ~15% below its 52-week high and thus is not currently in the preferred ‘new highs’ zone for classic CAN SLIM entries.
Supply and Demand:
Shares outstanding are ~562.2m; float is not provided. Average daily volume is ~0.80–0.83m shares, indicating liquidity is adequate for institutions but the share count is large (not the ‘scarce supply’ profile typical of smaller superleaders). No short interest data is provided. Without daily volume/price action data (accumulation vs distribution days), we cannot conclusively assess institutional accumulation. The announced multi-year buyback (€2.5–€3.5bn through 2030) is a positive supply-side support, but it is gradual rather than a near-term float shock.
Leader or Laggard:
Mixed. Fundamentally, Schneider appears to be a sector bellwether in electrification and data centers (often viewed as a ‘leader’ category). Technically, the stock is not acting like a fresh leader because it is below its 52-week high and sitting around major moving averages rather than breaking out. The provided 1-year change is about -15.9%, which is not characteristic of a top-tier momentum leader at this point in the cycle. This can change quickly if the stock forms a proper base and breaks out on heavy volume during a strong market uptrend.
Institutional Sponsorship:
Direct institutional ownership data is not provided. Indirect signals are favorable: broad analyst coverage (e.g., 23 analysts with a Buy consensus on MarketScreener), and the stock is included as a high-conviction idea by a major bank research list (RBC Top 30 Global Ideas). Morningstar also rates the company as wide-moat and fairly valued (as of mid-2025). However, CAN SLIM prefers to see evidence of increasing high-quality sponsorship (top funds building positions), which cannot be verified here.
Market Direction:
Not enough market index/market breadth data is provided to apply O’Neil’s ‘M’ timing rules (follow-through days, distribution day count, etc.). As a result, any buy decision should be conditioned on the general market trend being in a confirmed uptrend. If the European market (and global risk appetite) is not in a confirmed uptrend, even strong stocks tend to fail on breakouts.
Key Risks
Primary Risk
Schneider does not currently satisfy the core CAN SLIM earnings acceleration requirement (25%+ current quarterly EPS growth), which increases the risk that the stock’s next breakout attempt (if any) lacks the institutional urgency that typically fuels O’Neil-style leaders.
Secondary Risks
- Data center and infrastructure projects are lumpy and subject to permitting/power constraints (especially in Europe), creating volatility in Systems growth and mix-driven margin pressure.
- FX and pricing/tariff timing risk: management acknowledged pricing may not fully offset tariffs/inflation within the calendar year, pressuring margins and potentially EPS.
- Balance sheet and capital allocation risk: higher net debt from acquisitions and the India JV buyout may constrain flexibility if macro demand weakens.
What Would Change My Mind
Bullish invalidation: continued low-to-mid single-digit EPS growth and further margin compression would reduce the probability of a leadership run. Bullish confirmation: a decisive return to strong EPS acceleration (ideally 25%+), evidence of margin stabilization/expansion, and a technically valid breakout to new highs from a proper base on heavy volume during a confirmed market uptrend.
Conclusion
Schneider Electric has many traits of a big-cap institutional favorite: dominant franchises, secular growth exposure (data centers, electrification), and a credible long-term plan with margin expansion goals and buybacks. That said, CAN SLIM is ruthless about timing and earnings power. The available EPS evidence (H1 2025 adjusted EPS down 1% reported) does not clear O’Neil’s 25%+ hurdle, and the stock is not acting like a fresh leader (trading below the 52-week high and around the 50/200-day lines). In classic O’Neil terms, Schneider looks more like a high-quality ‘watchlist’ candidate than an actionable breakout buy today. Investors following CAN SLIM would typically wait for (1) a strong earnings acceleration catalyst, (2) a proper base with tight price action, and (3) a breakout to new highs on decisive volume during a confirmed market uptrend.
Research Sources (22 found)
Schneider Electric Earnings: Strong Results Led by Double ...
Published: 7/31/2025
Schneider Electric (SU) investor relations material
Published: 12/12/2025
2025 Half Year Financial results
Published: 7/31/2025
Half Year 2025 Results
Published: 7/31/2025
Top 30 Global Ideas for 2025 - Fourth Quarter Update
Published: 10/2/2025
What is Competitive Landscape of Schneider Electric Company?
Published: 12/7/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 2025 Revenues presentation
Published: 10/29/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 2025 Revenues
Published: 10/29/2025
2025 Half Year Presentation
Published: 7/30/2025
Q3 2025 Schneider Electric SE Corporate Sales Call on October 30, 2025 / 7:30AM
Published: 10/31/2025
Schneider Electric Announces $4B Buyback, Margin Increase
Published: 12/11/2025
Schneider Electric Highlights Strategic Growth at Capital Markets Day
Published: 12/11/2025
UPDATE 1-Schneider Electric unveils $4 billion share buyback, pumps up margin forecast
Published: 12/11/2025
Schneider Electric SE
Published: 12/11/2025
Exclusive: Schneider Electric’s CEO on how he’s rebuilding the 189-year old energy giant for the AI era
Published: 10/22/2025
Schneider Electric Consensus Estimates - Post-Q3 2025 release
Published: 11/12/2025
Schneider Electric shares fall on margin, cash flow weakness By Investing.com
Published: 8/6/2025
Schneider Electric Q3 Revenues Up; Sees FY25 Organic Revenue, Margin At Low-end Of View; Stock Down
Published: 10/30/2025
Schneider Electric (ENXTPA:SU): Evaluating Valuation After Recent Share Price Dip
Published: 11/9/2025
Schneider Electric to host a Capital Markets Day
Published: 9/1/2025
2025 Half Year Presentation
Published: 7/30/2025
Securing European energy security and competitiveness through electrification | Schneider Electric
Published: 9/8/2025
Search Queries Generated
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA quarterly earnings results revenue growth margins guidance
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA competitive position market share competitors moat advantages
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA CEO strategy capital allocation governance insider activity
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA bear case analysis risks concerns challenges
Schneider Electric S.E. SU.PA macro catalysts industry trends regulatory impact upcoming events