Deluxe (DLX) Q1 Margins And EPS Growth Challenge Bearish Flat Profitability Narrative

Deluxe Corporation

Deluxe Corporation

DLX

0.00

Deluxe (DLX) opened 2026 with Q1 revenue of US$538.1 million and basic EPS of US$0.77. Trailing 12 month figures show revenue of US$2.1 billion and EPS of US$2.31, supported by 85.5% earnings growth over the past year. Over recent quarters the company has seen revenue fluctuate in a tight band between US$520.6 million and US$540.2 million, with basic EPS ranging from US$0.26 to US$0.77, and net profit margins over the last 12 months running at 4.9% versus 2.6% in the prior year. This sets up a quarter where profitability trends are front and center for investors.

See our full analysis for Deluxe.

With the results on the table, the next step is to see how these margin and earnings trends line up against the dominant market narratives, and where the data pushes back on those stories.

NYSE:DLX Earnings & Revenue History as at May 2026
NYSE:DLX Earnings & Revenue History as at May 2026

Trailing EPS Closes In On Analysts’ 2029 View

  • Trailing 12 month EPS is US$2.31 compared with bearish analysts expecting EPS of US$3.46 by about 2029 and the broader analyst group expecting US$4.01, so a good portion of the earnings per share those narratives discuss is already reflected in recent results.
  • Bears argue Deluxe could see revenue stay fairly flat while EPS rises to US$3.46 by 2029, and the latest numbers partly echo that mix, with trailing 12 month revenue at about US$2.1b and net margin at 4.9%.
    • The bearish view expects margin to move from roughly 4% to 7.6%, and the latest 4.9% margin already sits between those two points. This supports the idea that margin expansion is plausible without large top line moves.
    • At the same time, trailing EPS of US$2.31 versus the US$3.46 bearish target shows there is still a gap, so the current profitability does not yet match the earnings level that bearish price targets depend on.

DCF Value Gap And 11.4x P/E Stand Out

  • With the stock at US$26.22, the reported P/E of 11.4x sits well below the industry at 22x and peers at 23.1x, and far below the DCF fair value figure of US$138.12, which is the anchor for a value focused argument.
  • Supporters of the bullish narrative point to this wide gap between market price, analyst targets and DCF fair value, and current earnings trends give that view some concrete footing.
    • Analysts are reported to have a consensus price target of US$32.67, so the US$26.22 share price sits below both that target and the DCF fair value of US$138.12. This supports the bullish case that the market is applying a discount.
    • Trailing earnings growth of 85.5% and a 4.9% net margin, compared with 2.6% a year earlier, line up with the bullish idea that profitability has been moving in the right direction even while the valuation multiples and price remain relatively restrained.
On a day when the stock still trades around 11.4x earnings, bulls and skeptics are looking at the same margin and valuation numbers and reaching very different conclusions about what comes next. That is exactly what the detailed bull case tries to unpack for you in one place. 🐂 Deluxe Bull Case

Interest Coverage Risk Beside a 4.58% Yield

  • The company’s dividend yield is flagged at 4.58% while interest payments are described as not well covered by earnings, so income and balance sheet pressure are sitting side by side in the latest risk summary.
  • Critics highlight this weak interest coverage as a key bearish point, and the reported figures explain why it matters for an investor looking at cash returns.
    • Trailing 12 month net income of US$103.9 million supports both debt service and that 4.58% dividend yield, so any strain on interest coverage directly shapes how much room there is to maintain or adjust payouts.
    • When that income stream is paired with a P/E of 11.4x and a stock price below the US$32.67 analyst target, the bear case does not dispute that valuation looks undemanding but instead focuses on how balance sheet pressure could limit how much of those earnings ultimately reach shareholders.
Skeptics are less focused on the recent 85.5% earnings growth and more on whether weak interest coverage and debt servicing demands cap how dependable that 4.58% income stream really is over time. That is the tension laid out in the detailed bear case. 🐻 Deluxe 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 Deluxe 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 on the table, do these results leave you feeling cautious or optimistic about Deluxe, and what matters most for your own portfolio right now? Take a moment to review the data yourself, then weigh the 6 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.

See What Else Is Out There

Deluxe’s weak interest coverage and the tension between its 4.58% dividend yield and debt servicing needs leave income focused investors with questions about resilience.

If you want your next idea to put financial strength ahead of uncertainty around debt and payouts, check out the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (45 results) today to compare alternatives.

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.