Most visitors wouldn’t recognize the equipment inside any of the hundreds of data centers currently being built in North America and Europe. boards for distribution. software for managing power. controls for cooling. systems for monitoring energy. Most of the time, Schneider Electric owns the logos on those parts. Founded in a French steel town in 1836, the company has undergone a lengthy and sometimes nonlinear transformation to become one of the world’s most important infrastructure companies at a time when the world is investing unprecedented sums of money in precisely the kind of infrastructure Schneider specializes in. The stock is up 40% over the previous year, and on April 22, the share price reached €281.50, a new 52-week high. The benchmark index for France, the CAC 40, increased by 12% during that time. The difference provides insight into how the market is currently pricing Schneider Electric.
The business has been thoughtful about its desired position. Although it still sells transformers and circuit breakers, it does more than that. It has been developing a digital layer—software that monitors, optimizes, and increasingly automates the energy systems of factories, buildings, and data centers—after acquiring AVEVA, a UK-based industrial software company. Schneider presented what it called “next-generation agentic manufacturing capabilities built on Microsoft Azure AI” at the Hannover Messe in April 2026. It announced a partnership with Deloitte to expedite AI-enabled digital transformation across industrial operations that same week. These are not ancillary pursuits. They are an intentional attempt to move up the value chain from hardware supplier to software-enabled infrastructure partner, which, if successful, would support the stock’s current premium price.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Schneider Electric SE |
| Ticker Symbol | SU.PA (Euronext Paris) |
| Founded | 1836, Le Creusot, France |
| Headquarters | Rueil-Malmaison, France |
| CEO | Olivier Blum (since November 4, 2024) |
| Founders | Eugène Schneider, Adolphe Schneider |
| Employees | 158,122 (2025) |
| Annual Revenue (2024) | €38.15 billion (~US$42+ billion) |
| TTM Revenue | €40.15 billion |
| TTM Net Income | €4.16 billion |
| Profit Margin | ~10.37% |
| Current Share Price | €274.75 (April 22, 2026) |
| 52-Week Range | €199.30 – €281.50 |
| Market Capitalization | ~€152–161 Billion |
| P/E Ratio (TTM) | ~34.11–38.31 |
| Forward P/E | 28.09 |
| EPS (TTM) | €7.97 |
| ROE | 15.61% |
| Return on Assets | 6.78% |
| Dividend | €4.20/share (forward); ex-date May 11, 2026 |
| Dividend Yield | ~1.54% |
| Total Debt/Equity | 81.41% |
| Levered Free Cash Flow (TTM) | €3.98 billion |
| YTD Return | +16.96% |
| 1-Year Return | +40.12% |
| 3-Year Return | +89.78% |
| Analyst Avg. Target | €296.50 |
| Analyst High Target | €340.00 |
| Stock Exchange | Euronext Paris |
| ISIN | FR0000121972 |
| Key Subsidiaries | AVEVA, Square D, Télémécanique |

It was noteworthy that there was an executive shuffle in early April. Hilary Maxson, the group CFO of Schneider Electric, was named Oracle’s new chief financial officer with immediate effect. There are two ways to interpret that kind of talent departure. One explanation is that a company has a retention issue if it loses its CFO to a bigger tech company. The more intriguing interpretation is that Oracle, in the midst of a massive, debt-heavy AI infrastructure buildout, specifically sought out someone with Schneider Electric’s CFO’s level of expertise and credibility in the field of AI infrastructure finance. According to that interpretation, a senior executive’s departure is a form of compliment.
Schneider Electric appears to be at the nexus of two convergent forces: the worldwide drive to increase electricity capacity and the surge in demand for AI-driven computing. Schneider representatives specifically discussed efforts to close what the company refers to as the US power gap, which is the gap between current electricity generation capacity and what AI, electric vehicles, and industrial electrification will require over the next ten years, at the Bloomberg New Energy Finance event in New York in April. That market is sizable. Depending on which estimates you believe, it is one of the biggest cycles of infrastructure investment in contemporary history.
A portion of this enthusiasm is reflected in the share price. For an industrial company, a forward P/E ratio of 28 is not cheap, but Schneider is increasingly trading as a technology-adjacent company rather than a pure industrial one, and the multiple is somewhat more defendable on that basis. While the high-end target of €340 indicates that at least some analysts think the AI infrastructure thesis still has room to run significantly further, the average analyst target of €296.50 suggests modest further upside from current levels.
It seems as though the market has gradually repriced a company that it had undervalued for years and is now catching up to a company whose positioning, despite its unglamorous beginnings, is genuinely difficult to replicate, based on the stock’s movement over the past year, from the mid-€190s to a new high above €280. The next concern is whether the premium already included in the shares allows for the kind of returns that initially attracted investors.
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