Prysmian S.p.A. (PRY) — Stock analysis
EURCurrent price
133,35 €
-1,70 € (-1.26%) today
Market signals
About Prysmian S.p.A.
Prysmian es el mayor fabricante mundial de cables para energía y telecomunicaciones. Opera en tres segmentos: Transmisión de Energía (cables de alta tensión para interconexiones eléctricas submarinas y terrestres), Distribución de Energía e Industrial & Construcción. Escindido de la división de cables de Pirelli en 2005, adquirió Draka (2011), General Cable (2018) y Encore Wire (2024). Sede en Milán.
¿Qué hace Prysmian?▾
Prysmian fabrica cables para la energía (alta tensión, distribución, industriales) y para las telecomunicaciones (fibra óptica, cables para centros de datos). Es el líder mundial en cables de alta tensión subterráneos y submarinos, estratégicos para las interconexiones eléctricas europeas y la eólica offshore.
¿En qué bolsa cotiza Prysmian?▾
Prysmian cotiza en Borsa Italiana con el ticker PRY. Es componente del índice FTSE MIB.
¿Paga dividendos Prysmian?▾
Sí. Distribuye un dividendo anual en progresivo crecimiento. La rentabilidad es habitualmente del 1,5-2,5%.
Why is Prysmian's order backlog important?▾
For the high-voltage cable business, projects are large and span several years, so the size and quality of the order backlog gives a forward view of revenue that a single quarter cannot. It is one reason the company is often discussed in the context of the energy transition. Lucex reports figures like this as information about the position you hold — it does not tell you to buy or sell.
Does Prysmian benefit from the energy transition?▾
Prysmian is frequently linked to electrification and offshore wind because grids and wind farms require large volumes of specialised cable. Whether that translates into a good investment for you is a judgement Lucex does not make — it explains the business context so you can weigh it yourself.
Index membership and scale
Prysmian trades on Borsa Italiana as PRY and is a component of the FTSE MIB. It grew into the world's largest cable maker largely through acquisitions — Draka, General Cable and Encore Wire — which is why its scale and geographic reach are central to how it is discussed. Unlike the family-controlled Italian names, Prysmian has a widely held free float rather than a single controlling shareholder.
What drives Prysmian's business
Prysmian's demand is tied to long-cycle structural trends: electrification, grid upgrades, offshore wind, and data-centre and telecom infrastructure. Its high-voltage submarine and underground cable business runs on a large multi-year order backlog, one of the most-watched indicators for the company alongside margins and the integration of acquisitions. These are the levers behind its results — offered as context, not as a signal to act.
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