Stock Markets February 4, 2026

Jefferies Flags European Capital-Goods Names Set to Benefit from Data Centers, Power and Automation Trends

Analyst house highlights Legrand, Siemens units, Prysmian, NKT, Schindler and Assa Abloy as top picks for 2026

By Ajmal Hussain
Jefferies Flags European Capital-Goods Names Set to Benefit from Data Centers, Power and Automation Trends

Jefferies has identified a group of European capital-goods companies that it believes are well positioned to capture growth from data center expansion, power-infrastructure investment and industrial automation. The broker highlights expected revenue drivers, margin improvements and capital allocation dynamics across Legrand, Siemens, Siemens Energy, Prysmian, NKT, Schindler and Assa Abloy, detailing catalysts and near-term considerations for each name.

Key Points

  • Jefferies highlights companies positioned to benefit from data-center expansion, power-infrastructure spending and industrial automation.
  • Legrand is expected to target 3-6% organic revenue growth in 2026 with data centers projected to grow 15% and reach 36% of revenues by 2030.
  • Prysmian and NKT are singled out for attractive growth and margin trajectories tied to US power-grid work and high-voltage capacity, while Schindler and Assa Abloy are viewed as beneficiaries of margin improvements and housing-market recovery respectively.

Jefferies has singled out a set of European capital-goods firms it views as attractive exposure to secular trends in data centers, power grids and industrial automation. The bank's analysis lays out forecasted revenue growth, margin opportunities and the capital-allocation backdrop for several household industrial names.

Below is a company-by-company breakdown of the key expectations Jefferies sets out for 2026 and beyond.


Legrand

Jefferies projects Legrand will target organic revenue growth of 3-6% for 2026, underpinned by a forecasted 15% expansion in its data-center business, which today accounts for roughly 25% of the group. The firm expects price increases of about 2% overall, including a carryover of 1.5% from the previous year. Jefferies points to Legrand's leading position in the white space market and its exposure to data-center upgrade cycles as drivers of upside. The broker also highlights management's view that data-center exposure could rise to 36% of group revenues by 2030. Outside of data centers, Legrand's non-data-center volumes remain in the mid-teens below 2019 levels, which Jefferies sees as an area with recovery potential.


Siemens

Following the planned SHL spin-off, Jefferies describes Siemens as evolving into a more focused industrial group with the potential to develop a differentiated AI-enabled industrial platform. The analyst team suggests the timeline for the transaction could be accelerated - with approval possibly achieved at an extraordinary general meeting later this year rather than waiting for the 2027 annual general meeting. For 2026, Jefferies regards the company's EPS guidance as cautious, given foreign-exchange headwinds and integration costs related to mergers and acquisitions. However, the bank anticipates meaningful operating leverage from 2027 onward, which it believes could enable Siemens to surpass its mid-term target of high-single-digit EPS growth.


Siemens Energy

Jefferies sees substantial midterm upside to consensus for Siemens Energy, citing favourable pricing and elevated utilisation across key markets. The broker notes an absence of indications that the cycle in Gas and Grids is turning, and expects rational competitive behaviour to support attractive economics. With relatively modest capital expenditure requirements, the company should be able to return a large portion of free cash flow to shareholders via dividends and buybacks, in Jefferies' view. Although Siemens Energy may appear expensive in the near term, the bank calculates its growth-adjusted multiple at 0.5x PEG, making it one of the cheapest in the sector on that metric.


Prysmian

Jefferies highlights Prysmian's differentiated exposure to US power-grid investment and data-center cabling demand, noting two-thirds of the group's EBITDA is generated in the US. The broker expects strong execution within Transmission to potentially surprise on the upside for both growth and margins. Record copper prices and tariff dynamics could support price increases and possible market-share gains in 2026, according to Jefferies. On a valuation basis, Prysmian is trading at 17x P/E on 2027 estimates, which the bank considers attractive for a company it expects to deliver mid-teens earnings growth.


NKT

Jefferies says NKT has moved beyond the principal risks tied to its ambitious investment programme and the capacity ramp-up in high-voltage production. The broker forecasts NKT will produce the fastest earnings growth and the highest high-voltage margins in the sector by 2028. While headline multiples on the stock are higher than peers, Jefferies regards NKT as the cheapest on a growth-adjusted PEG basis.


Schindler

Jefferies names Schindler as its preferred elevator play and expects the company to hit its medium-term margin target in the current year. The bank anticipates incremental savings of CHF150-170 million this year, a level of efficiency that could lift margins beyond current expectations. Jefferies also points to ramping SG&A and modularity savings, and suggests these could prompt management to raise medium-term margin guidance at the group's Capital Markets Day in June.


Assa Abloy

Jefferies outlines a recovery case for Assa Abloy, noting that improving consumer confidence in the Nordics - where floating-rate mortgages are common - removes a significant barrier to a housing-led rebound. The broker expects organic revenue growth in EMEIA to accelerate to 4.5-5% with margins potentially returning to at least 16%. In the US, Jefferies sees signs of recovery in residential repair and remodeling demand that extend beyond interest-rate moves, supported by homeowners tapping home equity lines of credit.


Collectively, Jefferies' selections emphasise exposure to three structural demand drivers - data centers, power-grid investment and industrial automation - and identify companies with differentiated positioning, margin-recovery potential or attractive capital-return prospects.

Risks

  • Foreign-exchange headwinds and M&A integration costs could weigh on near-term EPS guidance - particularly relevant for large industrial groups such as Siemens.
  • Volatility in commodity prices and tariffs, such as record copper levels, could impact margins and pricing dynamics for cable producers like Prysmian.
  • Execution risks tied to ambitious investment and capacity ramp-ups remain for companies such as NKT until projects are fully absorbed and margins normalise.

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