Gibraltar Industries (ROCK) Margin Compression And Q1 EPS Loss Test Bullish Growth Narrative

Gibraltar Industries, Inc.

Gibraltar Industries, Inc.

ROCK

0.00

Gibraltar Industries (ROCK) opened Q1 2026 with total revenue of US$356.3 million and a basic EPS loss of US$0.40, setting a cautious tone around the latest numbers. The company has seen quarterly revenue move from US$246.4 million and EPS of US$0.76 in Q1 2025 through a series of US$309.5 million to US$310.9 million quarters with EPS between US$0.99 and US$1.12, before landing at US$268.7 million and EPS of US$0.40 in Q4 2025. This gives investors a clear look at how the top line has progressed alongside a sharp swing into loss this quarter. With trailing 12 month EPS at US$2.10 and net profit margin at 5% including a one off loss, the current release puts the spotlight firmly on how durable the company’s margins really are.

See our full analysis for Gibraltar Industries.

The next step is to compare these headline figures with the most widely held market and community narratives, highlighting where the latest margin picture fits with expectations and where it may challenge prior views.

NasdaqGS:ROCK Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026
NasdaqGS:ROCK Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026

Margins Hit As One Offs Weigh On Profit

  • Over the last 12 months, Gibraltar generated US$1.25b of revenue and US$62.4 million of net income excluding extra items, which works out to a 5% net margin compared with 10.5% a year earlier, with a US$22.2 million one off loss contributing to the drop.
  • Bulls highlight long term margin potential from system integration and higher value Agtech and infrastructure projects, yet the current 5% trailing margin and recurring earnings from discontinued operations losses of US$195.4 million over the same period show that the bullish view has to absorb a period of weaker profitability.
    • Agtech bookings and backlog growth in the bullish narrative sit against reported earnings from discontinued operations losses of US$55.4 million in Q1 2026 and US$122.3 million in Q3 2025, which still flow through reported results.
    • Company wide systems work that bulls expect to help margins is also linked to lower segment margins in the commentary, which lines up with the step down from a 10.5% margin last year to 5% now.
Bulls argue that Q1’s weaker margin picture is a temporary trade off on the way to higher quality growth over time, but the current 5% margin and sizeable discontinued operations losses make it important to understand how optimistic investors are thinking about that transition before deciding how much weight to put on the bullish case. 🐂 Gibraltar Industries Bull Case

Revenue Trend Stronger Than EPS Swing Suggests

  • Total revenue has moved from US$246.4 million in Q1 2025 to US$356.3 million in Q1 2026, while trailing 12 month revenue stands at US$1.25b with basic EPS of US$2.10 and net income excluding extra items of US$62.4 million.
  • Consensus narrative points to a multi segment growth story in Agtech, metal roofing and infrastructure, and that is consistent with revenue rising across the last few reported quarters, but the shift from basic EPS of US$4.51 on a trailing basis in Q1 2025 to US$2.10 in Q1 2026 shows that profit growth has not kept pace with the top line.
    • Analysts are expecting earnings to grow 49.7% per year and revenue 21.7% per year, yet the recent period shows higher sales already in place while trailing earnings excluding extra items have moved from about US$135.0 million a year ago to US$62.4 million now.
    • This tension between strong revenue progress and softer earnings fits with the consensus view that project delays and integration work in areas like Agtech and Residential can make profitability more volatile even when the order book looks healthy.

Valuation Signals Versus Profit Quality

  • At a share price of US$37.59, the stock is flagged as trading on a P/E of 17.9x compared with peer and industry averages of 18.2x and 21.8x, and at a 66.2% discount to a DCF fair value of US$111.06 and below an analyst price target of US$72.00.
  • Bears focus on balance sheet and cash flow risks, arguing that debt is not well covered by operating cash flow and that project timing issues can pressure margins, which sits alongside valuation indicators that suggest the stock looks inexpensive relative to peers and DCF fair value.
    • The 5% trailing net margin and US$22.2 million one off loss mean current profit quality is weaker than the 10.5% margin a year ago, which can support the cautious view that low multiples partly reflect these pressures rather than pure mispricing.
    • At the same time, forecasts for 49.7% yearly earnings growth and 21.7% yearly revenue growth mean that if execution on Agtech backlog and Residential integration does not improve cash generation, the bearish concerns around debt coverage and project risk become more important than what the headline discount to DCF fair value might suggest.
Skeptics warn that until cash generation and margins line up better with the optimistic growth forecasts, the apparent discount to US$72.00 analyst targets and US$111.06 DCF fair value needs to be treated with care and tested against how the cautious narrative frames balance sheet and execution risk. 🐻 Gibraltar Industries 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 Gibraltar Industries on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

With sentiment split between cautious and optimistic, this is a moment for you to look at the numbers directly and stress test both sides of the argument; start by weighing up the 4 key rewards and 3 important warning signs.

See What Else Is Out There

Gibraltar Industries is wrestling with thinner 5% margins, sizeable discontinued operations losses and earnings that have not kept pace with its revenue profile.

If those profit and balance sheet pressures give you pause, move some attention toward the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (44 results) to focus on companies where financial footing and earnings quality look sturdier.

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.