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Legrand beats forecasts as U.S. data centre demand boosts profit

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 12:33 AM

By Mathias de Rozario and Etienne Breban

May 7 (Reuters) – French electrical and digital building infrastructure group Legrand on Thursday reported a better-than-expected profit for the first quarter of ​2026, driven by a growing data centre market.

Adjusted operating ‌profit grew 11.5% from last year to 524.7 billion euros over the period, compared with 519 million euros in a company-provided consensus.

Legrand’s shares rose 4% in early Paris trading.

Legrand recorded an 11.4% growth in sales, almost exclusively ‌driven ​by a 29.1% increase in its biggest ⁠market, the United States. ⁠Tech companies are investing heavily in data centres to meet surging demand for data-hungry AI models.

“Since the start of the year, we have announced four acquisitions, all in the data centre ​and energy transition sectors, representing a combined annual turnover of approximately 275 million euros,” Legrand CEO Benoit Coquart said in ⁠a call with reporters.

He added that ⁠data centre activity should represent around 30% of ​sales in 2026 after growing to 26% last year.

Sales have been ​impacted by a 5.8% hit from foreign exchange and continued ‌weaknesses in new construction and renovation activity, particularly in key European markets.

In Europe, which accounted for 36.3% of sales, growth in Germany and Italy were not sufficient to offset declines in France, ⁠Spain or Britain.

“We knew the first quarter would be difficult, and it is. Will things improve by the end of the year? That’s ⁠still what most ‌experts think, with the big question mark over ⁠the impact of the crisis in the Middle ​East,” ‌Coquart told Reuters.

Legrand saw no significant impact from ​the conflict ⁠in the Middle East, with 2% of sales coming from the region.

“We estimate price effects of 2% to 3%,” Coquart said.

Legrand confirmed its full-year outlook, expecting a negative currency impact of 2%.

(Reporting by Mathias de Rozario in Gdansk; Additional reporting by Etienne Breban; Editing ​by Matt Scuffham)