Abacus Global Management (ABX) Profitability Return Tests Bullish EPS Ramp Narratives In Q1 2026
Abacus Global ABX | 0.00 |
Abacus Global Management Q1 2026 earnings set the tone for a profitability focused story
Abacus Global Management (ABX) opened Q1 2026 with revenue of about US$59.4 million and basic EPS of US$0.07, setting a clear benchmark for how the year is starting to shape up. Over recent quarters, the company has seen revenue move from US$44.1 million in Q1 2025 to US$59.4 million in Q1 2026, while quarterly basic EPS has ranged from US$0.05 to US$0.18. This gives a clearer picture of how the top line and EPS have tracked into this latest print. With the trailing twelve months now showing basic EPS of US$0.40 and net income of US$38.7 million on revenue of US$250.5 million, the market will be weighing how durable these margins look against the growth outlook and interest coverage concerns.
See our full analysis for Abacus Global Management.With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how this earnings profile lines up with the prevailing narratives around growth, risk and profitability quality that investors have been following over the past year.
TTM earnings of US$38.7 million underline the shift back to profit
- On a trailing twelve month basis, Abacus Global Management generated net income of US$38.7 million on US$250.5 million of revenue, with basic EPS at US$0.40, showing a clear contrast to the loss reported in Q4 2024 when net income was US$18.3 million on US$33.2 million of revenue.
- What bullish investors highlight is that this return to profit lines up with their view of stronger earnings power, although they are assuming much more aggressive outcomes than the recent record suggests, such as earnings reaching US$255.8 million by around 2028 and margins rising far above the levels implied by today’s US$7.2 million Q1 2026 net income and US$59.4 million revenue.
- That bullish path would mean earnings that are several times higher than the current trailing US$38.7 million, which is a large step up from where the company is today.
- It would also require EPS to move from the current trailing US$0.40 to US$2.60, a change that goes well beyond the recent quarterly EPS range of roughly US$0.05 to US$0.18.
Bulls argue that Q1’s profitability and the last twelve months of positive earnings are just the first phase of a much steeper earnings ramp, and they point to detailed revenue and margin forecasts to back that view. 🐂 Abacus Global Management Bull Case
P/E of 22.9x sits between peers and the wider insurance industry
- ABX currently trades on a trailing P/E of 22.9x, which is below its peer group average of 34.9x but above the broader US Insurance industry average of 11.1x, while analysts’ average target price of US$13.42 compares with a current share price of US$9.25.
- Critics focus on this mixed valuation picture, arguing that even after the move to profitability and the analyst expectation for about 14.2% annual earnings growth, paying a premium to the wider insurance industry leaves limited room for error if revenue, which is projected to grow around 7.9% a year, stays below the wider US market growth forecast of 11.6%.
- The valuation gap versus peers suggests some discount is already in place, yet the premium to the insurance sector and the lower forecast revenue growth rate compared with the US market create tension with the idea that the stock is unequivocally cheap.
- For anyone weighing the US$13.42 target against the current US$9.25 price, the question is whether the recent trailing EPS of US$0.40 and the projected 14.2% earnings growth rate will be enough to justify both the industry premium and the implied upside.
Interest coverage risk offsets the stronger profit trend
- Over the last twelve months the company has moved from a loss in Q4 2024 to TTM net income of US$38.7 million, yet interest payments are still described as not well covered by earnings, flagging a financial risk alongside the improving profit profile.
- Bears argue that this weak interest coverage, combined with a five year earnings decline of about 7.9% a year before the recent turnaround, leaves the business exposed if revenue growth runs closer to the forecast 7.9% per year rather than the higher growth rates some investors focus on.
- The concern is that, even with TTM basic EPS at US$0.40 and analysts expecting roughly 14.2% annual earnings growth, any slowdown in the US$250.5 million revenue base or pressure on margins could quickly squeeze the cushion available to service debt costs.
- Seen alongside the current 22.9x P/E, the combination of weaker interest coverage and a history of earnings decline gives skeptics a concrete set of numbers to point to when questioning how resilient this new profitability really is.
Skeptics warn that until interest coverage clearly improves, the recent earnings recovery and revenue scale of US$250.5 million need to be viewed through the lens of balance sheet strain as well as upside potential. 🐻 Abacus Global Management 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 Abacus Global Management on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
With bulls and bears both making strong cases, the real question is where you land. Take a close look at the data, weigh the trade offs, and check the 3 key rewards and 1 important warning sign
See What Else Is Out There
Abacus Global Management faces pressure from relatively weak interest coverage, a history of earnings decline and a P/E premium to the broader insurance sector.
If you are uneasy about those balance sheet and earnings pressures, it makes sense to compare alternatives with stronger cushions by checking the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (46 results).
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.
