MBIA (MBI) Loss Of US$50 Million Challenges Optimistic Margin Recovery Narrative

MBIA Inc. -1.69% Post

MBIA Inc.

MBI

5.82

5.82

-1.69%

0.00% Post

MBIA (MBI) has just closed out FY 2025 with fourth quarter revenue of US$13 million and a basic EPS loss of US$1.01, alongside net income from ongoing operations showing a loss of US$50 million. The company has seen quarterly revenue move from US$26 million in Q4 2024 through US$33 million and negative US$43 million in early 2024 to US$21 million, US$15 million, then US$13 million in 2025. Quarterly basic EPS has ranged from a loss of US$5.33 in Q2 2024 to losses of US$1.28, US$0.14 and US$1.01 across 2025, setting up a story where investors are likely to focus on how efficiently MBIA is managing its shrinking top line against persistent losses and what that implies for margins.

See our full analysis for MBIA.

With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to weigh them against the most widely held narratives around MBIA, to see which stories the latest results support and which ones the data starts to challenge.

NYSE:MBI Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Feb 2026
NYSE:MBI Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Feb 2026

Running losses still large at US$175 million TTM

  • On a trailing 12 month basis, MBIA reported total revenue of US$80 million and a net loss from ongoing operations of US$175 million, which works out to basic EPS of US$3.55 in losses.
  • Analysts' consensus view talks about earnings reaching US$58.3 million by around 2028 with margins moving from about 188.2% in the red to 64.6% in the black, and the current loss profile sets up a clear test of that path:
    • The last four reported quarters still show losses in each period, including US$50 million in Q4 2025 and US$62 million in Q1 2025, so any future profit story has to bridge that gap.
    • At the same time, the data shows losses shrinking at about 4.2% per year over five years. This is consistent with a gradual improvement but still far from the earnings level implied in those longer term forecasts.

Revenue growth vs flat outlook

  • Over the last year, revenue growth is described at about 8.4% per year. Yet quarterly revenue in the table runs from US$33 million in Q3 2024 to US$13 million in Q4 2025, while analysts assume revenue of US$90.4 million by 2028 that is characterized as fairly flat over the next three years.
  • What is interesting for the bullish narrative is how that 8.4% revenue growth rate lines up with assumptions that revenue stays fairly flat, even as bulls expect higher margins to carry future earnings:
    • The consensus narrative ties a lot of the potential upside to margin improvement rather than big new premium growth. This fits with comments about the insured portfolio running off and limiting future revenue expansion.
    • Given that the insured par at National is described as shrinking and leverage sits at 23 to 1, bulls are effectively leaning on cost control and better outcomes on legacy exposures rather than a jump in top line to support those margin targets.
If you want to see how those margin assumptions stack up against MBIA's latest numbers, have a look at 🐂 MBIA Bull Case for the full bull case.

Premium P/S, mixed valuation signals

  • MBIA trades on a P/S of 4.1x compared with about 1.2x for the wider US insurance group and roughly 1.0x for peers. A DCF fair value of about US$34.47 in the supplied data sits well above the current share price of US$6.55 and the analyst price target of US$7.75.
  • Bears focus on that valuation gap by pointing out that the premium P/S multiple is coming alongside negative shareholders' equity and ongoing losses, which leaves little room for disappointment if forecasts do not play out as expected:
    • The company is still unprofitable on a trailing 12 month basis and has negative equity flagged in the risk summary, so the balance sheet is not yet reflecting the DCF fair value figure or the US$58.3 million earnings level assumed for 2028.
    • With the analyst price target only about 18% above the current US$6.55 share price, skeptics can argue that the market is already cautious, even as the DCF fair value number suggests a much larger gap that depends heavily on that future profit recovery.
Skeptical about whether those losses and balance sheet issues justify a premium P/S? Take a look at 🐻 MBIA Bear Case for a focused breakdown of the cautious 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 MBIA on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

Reading this, you can probably sense the mix of concern and cautious optimism around MBIA, so move quickly, review the numbers yourself, and weigh up the 3 key rewards and 1 important warning sign before you decide where you stand.

Explore Alternatives

MBIA is still working through sizeable losses, negative equity and shrinking revenue, so the current numbers leave plenty of questions about durability and downside risk.

If that mix of ongoing losses and a stretched balance sheet feels uncomfortable, check out our 76 resilient stocks with low risk scores to quickly find companies with more resilient financial profiles.

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.