SAP’s stock edged up 0.53% on Friday to close at €152.10, a small but technically meaningful move. It crossed back above its 50-day moving average for the first time in several weeks.
SAP SE, SAP
The catalyst was a major government contract. SAP and Deutsche Telekom have won a deal to build a sovereign AI cloud platform for Germany’s federal, state, and local administrations. The contract was awarded by the Federal Ministry for Digitalisation and State Modernisation.
T-Systems is the lead infrastructure bidder. SAP comes in as the technology partner, supplying its Business AI Platform along with expertise in business processes, data management, and what the company calls “trustworthy AI.”
The ministry has booked €250 million in domestic AI data centre capacity. But neither the contract term nor how that sum gets split between the partners has been disclosed. For SAP, acting as a technology partner rather than prime contractor, the actual revenue impact is still unclear.
The deal survived legal challenges. Both Google and adesso filed objections but later withdrew them.
The government contract is not an isolated move. SAP has been embedding AI across its core product lines.
Automotive supplier Martur Fompak is running 400 daily production-line feeds through SAP S/4HANA using what SAP describes as “embodied AI.” Ericsson has adopted SAP’s autonomous AI solutions for its data infrastructure. SAP and Cyberwave are also deploying AI-powered robots in a logistics warehouse.
At its Sapphire conference, SAP introduced a unified AI platform, new autonomous business suites, and fresh partnerships with Ericsson and the Madrid City Council.
Databricks has also announced deeper integration with SAP, through SAP Business Data Cloud, syncing semantic metadata and governance tags into Unity Catalog to make SAP data more AI-ready.
Analyst opinion on SAP is divided. Deutsche Bank, UBS, Jefferies, and Berenberg all reaffirmed buy ratings in May, with price targets ranging from €200 to €230. JP Morgan sits at neutral. DZ Bank recommends selling.
The split reflects genuine tension. SAP’s fundamentals remain solid, but the near-term path to monetising its AI investments is not fully visible yet.
Technically, there are reasons for caution. The stock remains 44% below its 52-week high and has fallen 43% over the past twelve months. The RSI hit 86.9, an overbought reading, after a 4.48% gain over the past seven days. Year-to-date, SAP is still down 24.70%.
The company is also in the middle of a long-running transition from a license-based, on-premise model to a SaaS and cloud model. One valuation narrative on Simply Wall St places a fair value of €246.79 on the stock — well above the current price of €151.78 — but that estimate depends on assumptions around revenue growth and margin expansion.
The key technical level to watch is whether €152.10 holds as support. If momentum continues, the next target is the 100-day moving average near €166.
The post Is SAP Stock a Buy After Germany’s Sovereign AI Cloud Contract? appeared first on CoinCentral.


