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ABB posts record orders on booming US and data centre demand

ABB posts record orders on booming US and data centre demand

CNA17-07-2025
ZURICH :Swiss engineering group ABB reported on Thursday its highest-ever quarterly order intake, helped by surging demand from the United States and for products used in data centres being built to support artificial intelligence.
Orders in the United States, the company's biggest market, jumped 37 per cent in the second quarter, outpacing a 14 per cent rise in the group's orders overall, ABB said.
Chief Executive Morten Wierod said the increase was driven by one big order and customers investing in automation and electrification, and was not due to pre-ordering to avoid the fallout of higher tariffs imposed by the United States.
"Demand for electricity is going up quickly," Wierod told reporters. "That is being used by data centres, but also a lot of other industries are increasing their electricity consumption."
ABB makes around 80 per cent of its products sold in the United States locally, which protects it against tariffs, Wierod said.
"There is no point pre-buying because we will not be hit by tariffs," he added.
For the three months to the end of June, ABB reported a 9 per cent rise in core operating income to $1.71 billion, beating analyst forecasts of $1.65 billion.
Net income of $1.15 billion was better than the $1.12 billion expected by analysts in a company-supplied consensus. Revenue rose 8 per cent to $8.90 billion, ahead of forecasts for $8.72 billion.
The company's stock was up 7 per cent in mid-morning trading in Zurich.
Only ABB's robotics business was affected by the current trade uncertainty as automotive customers held off on investments while they waited to find out the final level of import duties.
But the company's data centre business continued to do well, posting an increase in orders in the range of 10-20 per cent during the quarter, with strong demand expected to continue.
U.S. companies announced a series of big-ticket AI and energy investment pledges earlier this week, part of a push by President Donald Trump to maintain the country's edge in the booming technology sector.
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