Kennedy Wilson (KW) Turns Q4 Profit As Dividend Coverage Concerns Persist

Kennedy-Wilson

Kennedy-Wilson

KW

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Kennedy-Wilson Holdings (KW) has just wrapped up FY 2025 with Q4 revenue of US$133.4 million and basic EPS of US$0.21, set against a trailing twelve month revenue base of US$542.5 million and a TTM basic EPS loss of US$0.28. Over recent quarters, the company has seen quarterly revenue move between US$116.7 million and US$142.6 million while basic EPS has swung from a loss of US$0.56 in Q3 2024 to a profit of US$0.21 in Q4 2025. This leaves investors focused on how durable any margin recovery might be from here.

See our full analysis for Kennedy-Wilson Holdings.

With the numbers on the table, the next step is to line these results up against the main narratives around Kennedy-Wilson, testing where the recent performance supports the story and where it raises fresh questions about margins and profitability.

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

TTM loss of US$38.8 million sets the backdrop

  • Over the trailing twelve months to Q4 2025, Kennedy-Wilson recorded total revenue of US$542.5 million and a net loss of US$38.8 million, compared with quarterly revenue in FY 2025 that ranged from US$130.8 million to US$142.6 million and swung between a loss of US$40.8 million in Q1 and a profit of US$29.6 million in Q4.
  • Consensus narrative highlights a push toward rental housing and fee-based investment management as drivers of more stable, recurring income. However, the trailing twelve month loss and earlier quarters like Q2 2025, which showed a US$91.5 million loss on US$531.5 million of revenue, indicate that earnings have not yet caught up to that portfolio shift.
    • Analysts talk about revenue potentially reaching US$1.6b by around 2028 with profit margins improving. At the same time, current EPS over the last twelve months sits at a loss of US$0.28 per share, which keeps the focus on execution rather than long term projections.
    • For you as a shareholder or prospective investor, the contrast between higher fee and rental ambitions and the recent pattern of losses makes it important to track whether later periods look more like Q4 2025, with US$29.6 million of net income, or earlier quarters that were still solidly in the red.

Dividend and debt coverage remain under strain

  • The stock offers a 4.38% dividend yield, but that payout is not covered by earnings or free cash flow and interest payments are not well covered by earnings. This aligns with the trailing twelve month loss of US$38.8 million and five year loss growth cited at 57.6% per year.
  • Bears argue that elevated debt costs and reliance on asset sales leave earnings and cash flow vulnerable, and the weak interest coverage metrics in the data support that concern rather than easing it.
    • With the company unprofitable over the last twelve months and interest expenses flagged as poorly covered, the cautious view that refinancing and servicing debt could pressure margins is tied directly to the recent P&L reality rather than just a hypothetical risk.
    • The dividend yield may look appealing on the surface, but the fact that it is not supported by current earnings or free cash flow means anyone relying on that income needs to pay close attention to how quickly loss levels and coverage ratios change from here.
Skeptics point out that a 4.38% dividend yield backed by a trailing twelve month loss leaves little room for error, and lay out how debt costs and refinancing risk could shape the story from here. 🐻 Kennedy-Wilson Holdings Bear Case

P/S of 2.8x versus DCF fair value of US$0.32

  • At a share price of US$10.95, Kennedy-Wilson trades on a P/S of 2.8x, slightly above the US Real Estate industry average of 2.7x but well below the 10.7x peer average. A provided DCF fair value of US$0.32 sits far under the current market price.
  • Bulls point to rental housing expansion and fee-based capital growth as reasons the stock could justify higher valuations in time. Yet the large gap between the US$10.95 share price and the DCF fair value of US$0.32, together with ongoing trailing twelve month losses, means the current numbers lean more toward the risk side of that debate than the optimistic case.
    • Analysts referencing potential 44.7% annual revenue growth and profit margins improving to around 5% are effectively assuming a very different earnings profile than the recent TTM loss of US$38.8 million that investors can see today.
    • For you, the tension between a relatively modest P/S against peers and a DCF fair value far below the market price is a reminder to stress test any personal valuation work rather than relying only on multiples or only on one model output.
Supporters of the bullish view argue that rental housing scale and fee income could eventually justify the current P/S, but the wide gap versus the DCF fair value of US$0.32 makes it worth checking how stronger earnings would need to be to bridge that difference. 🐂 Kennedy-Wilson Holdings Bull 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 Kennedy-Wilson Holdings on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

If this mix of cautious and optimistic signals feels conflicting, use it as a prompt to review the filings, chart the trends, and decide where you stand. You can also go straight to the source and review the 3 important warning signs

See What Else Is Out There

Kennedy-Wilson combines a trailing twelve month loss, an uncovered dividend, and pressured interest coverage. This combination makes income reliability and balance sheet strength key concerns.

If you want income ideas where cash generation and financial resilience appear firmer, check out the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (45 results) now and compare how their coverage metrics stack up.

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.