Magnolia Oil & Gas (MGY) Margin Decline Challenges High Multiple Bullish Narrative

Magnolia Oil & Gas Corp. Class A

Magnolia Oil & Gas Corp. Class A

MGY

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Magnolia Oil & Gas FY 2025 earnings snapshot

Magnolia Oil & Gas (MGY) closed FY 2025 with Q4 revenue of US$317.6 million and basic EPS of US$0.37, alongside net income of US$67.9 million, while its trailing twelve month figures came in at US$1.3 billion of revenue, EPS of US$1.73 and net income of US$320.8 million. Over the past few quarters, revenue has ranged from US$318.0 million to US$350.3 million, with EPS between US$0.37 and US$0.54. The trailing net margin of 24.5% sits below the 27.5% level reported a year earlier, so investors are likely to focus on how these solid headline numbers balance against softer profitability.

See our full analysis for Magnolia Oil & Gas.

With the latest figures on the table, the next step is to see how this earnings profile lines up with the prevailing narratives around Magnolia Oil & Gas, and where the data pushes back on those stories.

NYSE:MGY Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026
NYSE:MGY Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026

Net margin trends and production costs

  • Magnolia generated trailing twelve month net income of US$320.8 million on US$1.3b of revenue, for a 24.5% net margin compared with 27.5% a year earlier, while average production cost over the period sat at US$9.06 per BOE alongside 36.424 MMboe of production.
  • Consensus narrative highlights Magnolia as a low cost, high margin producer in the Eagle Ford and Austin Chalk. The current 24.5% margin with sub US$10 per BOE average costs partially supports that view, yet the move from 27.5% to 24.5% shows margins have not been static and reminds you that cost control and pricing both matter for how durable that advantage is.

EPS trend versus bullish growth story

  • Across FY 2025, basic EPS moved from US$0.54 in Q1 to US$0.37 in Q4, while trailing EPS is US$1.73 compared with earnings that had previously grown about 15.6% per year over five years and then showed weaker growth in the last year.
  • Bulls argue Magnolia can grow earnings by about 6% per year on revenue growth of around 4.8% per year, helped by low leverage and capital discipline. Yet the step down in quarterly EPS from US$0.54 to the low US$0.40 to US$0.37 range and the softer trailing growth relative to the five year profile means the current numbers need to catch up to that bullish script rather than clearly confirming it.
    • The bullish view leans on future margins improving from the current 24.5%, while the last twelve months show that margin sitting below the 27.5% level from a year earlier.
    • With the stock at US$28.65 compared with a DCF fair value of US$66.63, the wide gap only lines up with the bullish case if earnings growth and margin trends move closer to the stronger historical pattern than to the more recent slowing.

Bulls point to margins, cash generation, and that wide gap to DCF fair value as reasons the story could improve from here, so if you want to see how that optimistic view is built, it is worth checking the full bullish narrative 🐂 Magnolia Oil & Gas Bull Case

Valuation premium and bearish concerns

  • Magnolia trades on a P/E of 16.6x at a share price of US$28.65, compared with 14.7x for the US Oil & Gas industry and 14.2x for peers, while analysts have a price target of US$33.89 and trailing net margin has moved from 27.5% to 24.5%.
  • Bears argue that concentration in Eagle Ford and Austin Chalk plus energy transition risks could pressure growth and margins. The combination of a 24.5% margin that is lower than the prior 27.5% level and a richer 16.6x P/E than industry and peers fits with that caution by showing investors are already paying more for each dollar of current earnings even as margins have edged down.
    • The forecast revenue growth rate of about 4.8% per year is below the cited broader US market growth of 11.3% per year, which is one of the points critics focus on when they question how much growth is being paid for at the current multiple.
    • At the same time, the stock price still sits below the US$33.89 analyst target, so anyone leaning into the bearish concerns needs to weigh that valuation premium in multiples against the discount to the target level on price.

If you want to see how skeptics connect these margin and valuation numbers to longer term risks, it is useful to read through the detailed cautious narrative 🐻 Magnolia Oil & Gas 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 Magnolia Oil & Gas 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 picture is not one sided, so take a closer look at the figures and form your own stance quickly by weighing up the 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign

See What Else Is Out There

Magnolia Oil & Gas is facing a softer net margin at 24.5%, slower EPS momentum, and a P/E that sits above industry and peer averages.

If you are uneasy about paying up for easing profitability and richer multiples, compare that profile with companies in the 44 high quality undervalued stocks.

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.