If you pretend the answer isn't speculative - if you rewrite it in your mind so that it is definitively stating what the problem is - then is it an attempt at fully answering the question (whether correctly or otherwise)? If not - for instance, if the question asks how to fix an error and the "answer" just speculates about some factor that might be responsible for the error appearing without hinting at how to fix it - then perhaps it's better understood as a request for clarification than as an answer.
In that case, you might want to flag it with a mod flag, suggesting that it either be deleted or maybe converted to a comment (if you think it's valuable to keep around in some form). If it's a non-answer and it's really obvious without any context and without reading the question that it's a non-answer, you could flag it as Not An Answer, but this is probably going to be very unusual; NAA has a very narrow definition on Stack Overflow and these kind of suggestions are going to tend to look like they could be interpreted as valid answers to some question.
On the other hand, if the answer is proposing what is potentially a full answer to the question, but is framing that otherwise complete answer as speculative and uncertain, then it probably shouldn't be deleted as a non-answer. (This applies whether the uncertainty is conveyed by way of framing the answer as a question or in some other way. Moderation decisions should be made on the substance of what a post says and not trivial details about its form; semantic pedantry like "this is not an answer because it ends with a question mark" is in my opinion never sufficient reason to delete a post.)
But in that situation: why is the answer merely speculative? Normally, as an answerer, you would have enough information in the question to determine if your answer works, and indeed you would probably test your answer and confirm it works before posting it; why hasn't the answerer done that?
If the answer is speculative because the answerer couldn't test it because the asker did a bad job of providing enough detail in their question, then the question probably deserves to be downvoted and closed as Needs debugging details or Needs details or clarity. Secondarily, maybe you'll also want to comment on the question and/or downvote the answer, but the primary problem is that there's something fundamentally wrong with the question.
If the question is just fine and the answer is speculative because the answerer simply couldn't be bothered to test it, then that's irritatingly lazy and I'd say that almost always means it's a bad answer in its current form. You might want to simply downvote such an answer and move on, or maybe leave a comment pointing out that it's unhelpful for an answer to be speculative and that the author ought to have tested it. Alternatively, you could determine yourself whether the answer works; if it does, you can edit it to make it non-speculative, and if it doesn't, you can downvote and explain why it's broken. You'll need to use your own judgement about which of these approaches is most useful to future readers. (A speculative answer that's also bad for orthogonal reasons and is posted on a question that already has other good answers should probably just be downvoted, maybe with an accompanying comment, and isn't worth editing. An answer that actually proposes a good, correct solution to the problem asked about, on a question that doesn't have other answers, should probably be edited to be non-speculative.)
Finally, the answer might be speculative because the answerer couldn't test it for reasons that the asker couldn't reasonably have avoided - e.g. perhaps the answer speculates about some possible detail of the asker's environment that wasn't mentioned in the question because it would've been unreasonable for the asker to even realise it was relevant. (Sometimes, if you knew some config setting or other environment detail was relevant, you would have no reason to ask your question in the first place, because the solution would be obvious. Such questions are in effect asking where to look to find the cause of the problem, and wouldn't make sense at all if they included in the question body what the asker found after they looked in the right place.)
Opinions on how to moderate this final category of questions are going to be diverse; some users will dispute that this category exists at all, and say that questions like this should simply be closed as Needs debugging details. I disagree; I think such questions are okay in principle, and having multiple answers posted under them suggesting possible causes and/or solutions is also okay in principle. In order to be useful, though, such answers should still be things that would work in some circumstances, and usually it will be ideal for them to explain what those circumstances are, why they cause the problem, and why any solution in the answer would help. You'll want to judge whether such an answer is potentially correct and whether it's sufficiently detailed and vote on it accordingly.
Finally, sometimes an answer will just arbitrarily suggest trying something that seems wildly unlikely to be useful, and will not justify the suggestion at all (e.g. suggesting upgrading Python on a question where you see absolutely no reason why the Python version would be relevant in any way at all). If that's the situation, then, regardless of what kind of question it's posted on, I'd suggest downvoting it and commenting to state that you see no reason why this would help - but I still wouldn't flag such an answer as NAA. It's still an attempt at answering, just a terrible one.