Graham Holdings (GHC) Margin Drop To 5.9% Tests Bullish Undervaluation Narrative
Graham Holdings Co. Class B GHC | 0.00 |
Graham Holdings (GHC) has put fresh numbers on the board for Q1 2026, with recent quarterly revenue running between about US$1.17 billion and US$1.28 billion over 2025 and Basic EPS ranging from US$5.50 to US$28.19 across those quarters. Over the past six reported quarters, revenue has moved from US$1,207.16 million in Q3 2024 to US$1,278.86 million in Q3 2025, while Basic EPS has ranged widely from US$16.55 to US$126.62. This has set the backdrop for a trailing net margin that has compressed even as the shares trade well below the provided DCF estimate. Overall, the latest numbers point to solid top line scale but a more pressured margin picture that investors will be watching closely.
See our full analysis for Graham Holdings.With the headline figures on the table, the next step is to measure them against the widely held narratives around Graham Holdings to see which stories hold up and which may need a reset.
Margins Slide From 15% To 5.9%
- Trailing net profit margin sits at 5.9%, compared with 15% a year earlier, with a US$178.3m one off gain included in the last 12 months that affects how clean those profit numbers look.
- What stands out for a bearish read is that this lower 5.9% margin and the reliance on a US$178.3m one off gain both line up with concerns about earnings quality. Even so, net income excluding extra items over the last reported quarters still ranges from US$23.7m to US$545.1m, which shows the core business has produced profits even as margins have tightened.
- Bears highlight the drop in margin and the one off gain as reasons to question the sustainability of trailing earnings, and the step down from US$545.1m net income in Q4 2024 to US$108.2m in Q4 2025 adds weight to that caution.
- At the same time, quarterly net income excluding extra items between US$23.7m and US$122.2m across 2025 indicates that, even with margin pressure, the company has not flipped into operating losses over the periods provided.
US$4.9b Trailing Revenue, 5.7% Growth
- On a trailing basis, revenue is reported at about US$4.9b, with the last few 12 month periods ranging from US$4.8b to US$4.9b and growth cited at 5.7% per year compared with 11% for the referenced US market.
- Supporters of a more bullish story often point to the diversified business mix as a stabiliser. This 5.7% revenue growth alongside trailing 12 month net income excluding extra items between US$290.7m and US$727.5m does give some backing to the idea that the group has scale and cash generation, although the slower growth versus the cited 11% market rate keeps that bullish angle grounded.
- What leans toward the bullish side is that trailing revenue around US$4.9b and net income in the hundreds of millions show a company with meaningful size rather than a small or speculative operation.
- The tension for that bullish view is that the 5.7% revenue growth lags the 11% comparator and earnings over the most recent year were reported as negative versus the five year trend, so the long term growth narrative does not fully match the latest period.
Curious how other investors connect these revenue and margin trends into a bigger story about Graham Holdings, and how they weigh growth against risks, you can tap into wider views through the Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives
Share Price Lags DCF Fair Value
- The current share price of US$1,122.51 sits well below the stated DCF fair value of about US$2,657.84, with the analysis pointing to a discount of roughly 57.8%, while the P/E of 16.8x is slightly under the 17.7x peer average and roughly in line with the 16.7x US Consumer Services industry.
- What surprises many readers is how this wide gap to DCF fair value sits next to softer profitability metrics. The bullish case that the stock looks inexpensive is supported by the quoted 57.8% discount and a P/E that is not stretched, yet the same data also show lower margins and earnings affected by a large one off gain, which gives cautious investors concrete reasons to question how much weight to put on that DCF gap.
- For the bullish angle, a share price far below the US$2,657.84 DCF fair value and a P/E slightly cheaper than peers can look appealing for value focused investors who are comfortable with conglomerate structures.
- For those more cautious, the move from a 15% net margin to 5.9% and the US$178.3m one off gain mean the earnings used in the DCF and P/E comparisons deserve closer inspection rather than being taken at face value.
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 Graham Holdings'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.
Given the mix of cautious and optimistic signals in the numbers so far, this is a good moment to look through the full data yourself and decide which narrative feels more convincing, then weigh that against the 1 key reward and 2 important warning signs highlighted in the 1 key reward and 2 important warning signs
See What Else Is Out There
Graham Holdings is facing tighter net margins, a heavy reliance on a US$178.3m one off gain, and earnings that do not fully match its past growth trend.
If that mix of pressured profitability and earnings quality worries you, compare it with companies screened for stronger financial foundations using the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (44 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.
