Agnico Eagle Mines (AEM) Net Margin At 39.5% Challenges Softer Earnings Forecast Narratives

Agnico Eagle Mines Limited

Agnico Eagle Mines Limited

AEM

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Agnico Eagle Mines (NYSE:AEM) opened 2026 with Q1 revenue of US$4.1b and basic EPS of US$3.39, against a trailing twelve month revenue base of US$13.5b and EPS of US$10.66 that reflects strong earnings growth of 126.1% over the past year. Over recent quarters, revenue has moved from US$2.2b in Q4 2024 to US$2.5b, US$2.8b, US$3.1b and US$3.6b in 2025, before reaching US$4.1b in Q1 2026. Basic EPS has stepped from US$1.02 to US$1.62, US$2.13, US$2.10, US$3.04 and now US$3.39, with trailing net margin at 39.5% pointing to profitability that investors will likely scrutinize closely.

See our full analysis for Agnico Eagle Mines.

With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to set these results against the widely held market narratives around Agnico Eagle Mines and see which stories line up with the data and which start to look stretched.

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

Margins Stretch Out At 39.5%

  • On a trailing basis, Agnico Eagle converted US$13.5b of revenue into US$5.3b of net income, which works out to a 39.5% net margin compared with 26.5% a year earlier.
  • Bullish investors highlight that this higher margin is paired with trailing EPS of US$10.66 and earnings growth of 126.1% over the last year, yet
    • earnings are forecast in the supplied data to decline by about 0.8% per year over the next three years, which sits awkwardly next to those strong trailing figures, and
    • revenue growth is projected at just 0.5% per year versus an 11.1% US market benchmark, so the current margin level has to work against a relatively soft growth outlook in the forecasts.
Record profitability and modest forward growth expectations give bulls plenty to discuss, but also leave some room for debate on how long this margin profile can persist before forecasts catch up or get revised. 🐂 Agnico Eagle Mines Bull Case

Revenue Near US$13.5b, But Slower Forecasts

  • Over the last twelve months, revenue totaled about US$13.5b compared with US$8.3b a year earlier on the same trailing basis, while quarterly revenue in Q1 2026 came in at about US$4.1b after stepping up from US$2.2b in Q4 2024 through the intervening quarters.
  • Bears point out that, despite this revenue track record, the supplied forecasts call for average earnings decline of 0.8% per year and revenue growth of only 0.5% per year over the next three years,
    • which contrasts with the 39.5% annualized earnings growth over five years that the trailing data reports, and
    • suggesting that the recent pace of profit expansion embedded in US$5.3b of trailing net income may not be assumed to continue in the same way within those forward numbers.
Skeptics looking at the slower forecast profile versus the recent revenue and earnings run rate are using that gap as a key part of their cautious case. 🐻 Agnico Eagle Mines Bear Case

P/E Of 17.2x Versus Peers At 26.2x

  • Based on trailing earnings, the stock trades on a P/E of 17.2x versus a peer average of 26.2x, an industry average of 22.2x, and a US market average of 19.4x, while the current share price of US$183.56 also sits above the supplied DCF fair value of US$173.34.
  • Consensus narrative focuses on this mix of relatively lower P/E and strong trailing earnings growth of 126.1%, but there is tension here because
    • the analyst price target cited in the inputs is US$253.14, which is higher than the current share price of US$183.56, and
    • earnings are at the same time forecast to decline slightly in the supplied estimates, so investors are weighing a discount to peer P/E multiples against softer growth assumptions and a DCF fair value that is below where the stock currently trades.

Next Steps

To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Agnico Eagle Mines on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

See What Else Is Out There

The forecasts in the supplied data point to slightly declining earnings and limited revenue growth, even as the current P/E sits above the DCF fair value.

If you are concerned about paying up for slowing growth, it makes sense to compare these trade offs against companies screened as 51 high quality undervalued stocks right now.

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.