Dana (DAN) Discontinued Ops Windfall Tests Bullish Margin Repair Narrative
Dana Incorporated DAN | 0.00 |
Dana (DAN) opened Q1 2026 with total revenue of US$1,868 million and a basic EPS loss of US$0.17, giving investors a fresh read on how top line scale is translating into the bottom line. Over the past year, the company has seen quarterly revenue move from US$1,781 million in Q1 2025 to US$1,868 million in Q1 2026. Basic EPS has ranged from a loss of US$1.37 in Q4 2024 to a loss of US$0.35 in Q4 2025 and a loss of US$0.17 in the latest quarter. This progression sets up a story that is focused on how efficiently that revenue base is being converted into profit. With losses on the trailing twelve months and forecasts pointing to future improvement, this set of results puts the focus squarely on whether margins can steadily repair from here.
See our full analysis for Dana.With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to set these results against the widely followed narratives around Dana’s growth, profitability, and risk to see which views are supported and which are challenged by the latest quarter.
Losses Narrow While LTM Still Shows US$67 Million In Red
- On a trailing twelve month basis, Dana booked total revenue of US$7.6b with a net loss from ongoing operations of US$67 million, compared with a quarterly Q1 2026 loss of US$19 million on US$1.9b of revenue.
- Analysts' consensus narrative expects operating efficiency gains to lift margins over time, and the current mix of modest revenue growth and smaller quarterly losses partly lines up with that view. However, trailing losses still highlight that the margin repair story is not yet visible in the full year numbers.
- Consensus comments point to initiatives like cost savings and plant optimization as future drivers for higher margins, while the reported LTM net loss of US$67 million shows that profitability is still some distance away in the historical data.
- With Q1 2026 showing a smaller loss than Q4 2025 on similar revenue, investors watching the consensus view may see early signs of progress. Yet the LTM loss reminds you that the past year is still dominated by red ink.
Discontinued Operations Add US$1.1b Boost To Q1
- Earnings from discontinued operations reached US$1.1b in Q1 2026, compared with US$9 million of expense in Q4 2025 and US$47 million of income in Q1 2025. This is a very large swing relative to ongoing net income of a US$19 million loss in the latest quarter.
- Bulls argue that actions like selling the Off Highway business and redeploying proceeds into debt reduction and buybacks can help earnings per share over time, and this quarter's very large discontinued earnings figure underscores how much of the story is tied to portfolio moves rather than day to day operating profit.
- The consensus narrative points to using sale proceeds to reduce leverage to below 1x EBITDA and cut the share count by roughly 25%, while the US$1.1b discontinued line item shows how big that asset sale footprint is in recent results.
- At the same time, ongoing operations still reported a US$19 million net loss, so investors leaning on the bullish view may want to separate one time gains from the underlying earnings trend.
Bulls see Q1 as part of a larger reset built on cost savings, electrification programs, and portfolio reshaping, and the detailed bull thesis lays out how these pieces are expected to feed into future EPS and margins over time 🐂 Dana Bull Case
Unprofitable Today With 63.03% Forecast Earnings Growth
- Over the last twelve months, Dana remained unprofitable, with losses having grown at about 34.7% per year over the past five years, even as revenue grew 3.7% per year and analysts now project earnings growth of 63.03% per year with a return to profitability within three years.
- Bears focus on the company’s history of widening losses and slower 3.7% revenue growth versus the broader US market’s 11.7%, and these numbers still back that caution even as forecasts call for a sharp earnings recovery.
- Critics highlight that the stock’s 1.45% dividend is not well covered by trailing earnings, which aligns with the ongoing LTM loss of US$67 million despite revenue of US$7.6b.
- The same data set that underpins upside arguments, such as the forecast 63.03% earnings growth, also shows five year loss growth of 34.7% per year, giving bears concrete support for questioning how quickly the business can shift from losses to consistent profit.
Skeptics point to the five year pattern of widening losses and modest 3.7% revenue growth when assessing how much weight to put on the bullish multi year earnings ramp 🐻 Dana Bear Case
Next Steps
To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Dana on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
With both risks and rewards in play, the real question is how this balance looks to you based on the underlying data and narratives. To pressure test your own view against the numbers investors are watching most closely, start by reviewing the 3 key rewards and 1 important warning sign
See What Else Is Out There
Dana is still reporting losses, with a trailing twelve month net loss of US$67 million, and a dividend that is not covered by current earnings.
If you want income backed by stronger fundamentals, use the 13 dividend fortresses to quickly spot higher yielding stocks where payments rest on sturdier profit profiles.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
