Waterstone Financial (WSBF) Margin Improvement To 19.8% Tests Bearish Earnings Narratives

Waterstone Financial, Inc.

Waterstone Financial, Inc.

WSBF

0.00

Q1 2026 results set the tone

Waterstone Financial (WSBF) opened 2026 with Q1 revenue of US$35.4 million and basic EPS of US$0.35, against a backdrop of trailing twelve month EPS of US$1.67 on revenue of US$148.5 million and a 57.1% year over year uplift in earnings. Over the past five reported quarters, revenue has moved from US$30.2 million in Q1 2025 to a range between US$35.4 million and US$38.0 million. Quarterly basic EPS has ranged from US$0.17 to US$0.45, setting up a picture of recovering profitability after a multi year earnings decline. With net profit margin improving to 19.8% from 14% over the last twelve months, investors are likely to focus on whether these stronger margins can hold.

See our full analysis for Waterstone Financial.

With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how this mix of higher recent earnings and stronger margins lines up with the prevailing narratives around Waterstone Financial's long term earnings track record and risk profile.

NasdaqGS:WSBF Earnings & Revenue History as at Apr 2026
NasdaqGS:WSBF Earnings & Revenue History as at Apr 2026

Margins and profit climb to 19.8%

  • Over the last 12 months, Waterstone Financial converted US$148.5 million of revenue into US$29.4 million of net income, which works out to a 19.8% net profit margin compared with 14% a year earlier.
  • What stands out for a more bullish view is that trailing 12 month EPS rose 57.1% year over year to US$1.67 even though five year earnings contracted at an average rate of 39.1% per year, which means:
    • The higher margin on US$148.5 million of revenue gives bulls hard numbers to point to when they argue that recent profitability is stronger than the longer term track record.
    • At the same time, the long run earnings decline anchors the cautious side of the bullish case because it shows the recent margin level has not yet reversed the multi year downtrend on its own.

Short term EPS reset after strong 2025

  • Q1 2026 basic EPS of US$0.35 and net income of US$6.0 million sit below the recent peak quarters of 2025, where EPS ranged from about US$0.43 to US$0.45 and net income was around US$7.7 million to US$7.9 million on revenue in the US$37.3 million to US$38.0 million range.
  • Skeptics with a more bearish tilt point to that five year earnings decline of 39.1% per year and argue that a single year of 57.1% earnings growth can be temporary, and the quarterly pattern here leaves room for that concern because:
    • Q1 2026 EPS of US$0.35 follows three quarters clustered near US$0.43 to US$0.45, so the latest figure is well above Q1 2025’s US$0.17 but still below the stronger quarters of last year.
    • Net income over the last four reported quarters totals US$29.4 million, yet bears can highlight that the most recent quarter contributed a smaller share of that than Q2 to Q4 2025, which makes it harder to argue that momentum is clearly building each quarter.
Bears who focus on the lumpiness in quarterly EPS and the long run earnings decline may want to see how that view stacks up against the full story in the dedicated bearish narrative before deciding what matters most here 🐻 Waterstone Financial Bear Case.

P/E of 10.6x versus DCF fair value

  • At a share price of US$17.91 and trailing 12 month EPS of US$1.67, the stock trades on a 10.6x P/E, which is higher than the 8.8x peer average but below both the US Diversified Financial industry at 16.5x and the broader US market at 19.5x, while a DCF fair value of US$3.88 sits well below the current price.
  • What critics focus on in a bearish narrative is the gap between the US$17.91 share price and the US$3.88 DCF fair value estimate, and the recent insider selling and unstable dividend history add to that argument because:
    • The combination of a P/E above immediate peers and a DCF value at roughly one fifth of the current price gives bears a valuation anchor even after the 57.1% trailing earnings growth and 19.8% margin improvement.
    • A patchy dividend track record, alongside significant insider selling in the past three months, provides extra data points for investors who worry that the recent profitability and payouts may not be consistent over time.

Next Steps

Don't just look at this quarter; the real story is in the long-term trend. We've done an in-depth analysis on Waterstone Financial's growth and its valuation to see if today's price is a bargain. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio now so you don't miss the next big move.

If this combination of stronger recent margins and longer term earnings pressure seems mixed, use the data to test your own view quickly, and then weigh up the 2 key rewards and 3 important warning signs.

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Waterstone Financial pairs a 10.6x P/E and stronger recent margins with a long run earnings decline, a DCF value far below the share price, and an unstable dividend history.

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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.