Tidewater (TDW) Margin Expansion To 24.7% Tests Bears On Profit Sustainability
Tidewater Inc TDW | 0.00 |
Tidewater (TDW) sets the tone with Q1 2026 results
Tidewater (TDW) opened Q1 2026 with recent quarterly revenue of about US$336.8 million in Q4 2025 and basic EPS of US$4.44, backed by trailing twelve month EPS of US$6.69 on revenue of roughly US$1.35 billion and trailing net income of US$334.7 million. Over the past reported periods, revenue has stayed in a tight band around US$333 million to US$345 million per quarter while basic EPS has ranged from a small loss of US$0.02 in Q3 2025 to US$4.44 in Q4 2025. This points to earnings that are more sensitive than the top line. For investors, the key takeaway from this print is how those earnings convert into margins and what that means for the quality of Tidewater’s profitability.
See our full analysis for Tidewater.With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how these results line up with the widely held stories about Tidewater’s growth, risks and long term earnings power.
Margins widen with 24.7% net profitability
- Trailing twelve month net income of US$334.7 million on US$1.35b of revenue works out to a 24.7% net margin, compared with 13.4% a year earlier on US$1.35b of revenue and US$180.7 million of net income.
- Consensus narrative points to tight vessel supply and a multi year offshore project pipeline as support for revenue and margin strength. At the same time, the current 24.7% margin and three recent quarters with revenue clustered around US$333 million to US$345 million show that profitability has moved more than the top line, which is exactly where bulls and bears differ on how durable these margins really are.
- Supporters of the consensus view highlight three consecutive quarters with gross margins above 50% and a trailing EPS of US$6.69 as evidence that the business is operating at a higher profitability level than in earlier periods with EPS between US$0.71 and US$0.88.
- Sceptics in the same consensus narrative flag dependence on offshore markets and acquisition execution as key swing factors. The move from quarterly net income of US$36.9 million to US$219.9 million over the last six reported quarters gives a sense of how sensitive earnings are if those factors turn.
Earnings growth far outpaces revenue trend
- Over the last twelve months, earnings grew 85.2% while revenue growth was slower, with trailing revenue at US$1.35b and forecast annual revenue growth of about 7.5% compared with an 11.2% forecast for the wider US market.
- Bulls argue that tight vessel supply and higher day rates can keep earnings growing faster than revenue. The 74.1% five year annualised earnings growth rate together with trailing EPS of US$6.69 heavily supports that view, although quarterly revenue holding in a narrow US$333 million to US$345 million band suggests investors need to watch how much of that earnings growth is coming from margins rather than volume.
- On the bullish side, expectations for roughly 31.5% annual earnings growth over the next few years build on the recent move from quarterly EPS of about US$0.71 to US$0.88 in 2024 to US$4.44 in Q4 2025. This shows how operational leverage has played out in the recent past.
- At the same time, revenue forecasts of around 7.5% a year, slower than the 11.2% market figure, line up more closely with the cautious part of the bullish narrative that sees most of the upside coming from pricing and utilisation rather than a surge in overall industry volume.
Valuation signals and the cautious view
- The stock trades at US$85.01 with a trailing P/E of 12.6x, compared with an industry average P/E of 26.6x and a peer average of 60.1x, and a DCF fair value of US$163.62, while analysts have a standardised price target of US$84.71.
- Bears argue that decarbonisation trends and industry overcapacity could compress margins and limit the ability to sustain current profitability. The fact that analysts expect earnings to move from US$334.7 million today to a consensus US$313.5 million in a few years, even as revenue is projected to reach about US$1.7b, shows how that concern is already built into forecasts despite the current valuation sitting below the US$163.62 DCF fair value.
- Critics point to consensus expectations that profit margins could ease from 24.7% to 18.9% over the next three years, which would be a meaningful step down from the recent period when net income ranged from US$151.7 million to US$334.7 million on trailing twelve month data.
- At the same time, the current P/E of 12.6x against an industry 26.6x suggests the market is already pricing in some of that more cautious outcome, so the tension for a bearish view is whether the projected margin compression and slower revenue growth versus the US market are enough to offset the apparent discount to both peers and the DCF fair value.
Next Steps
To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Tidewater on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
Torn between the bullish and cautious stories around Tidewater? Act now by reviewing the underlying data, forecasts and sentiment, then weigh up the 4 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.
See What Else Is Out There
Tidewater’s forecast revenue growth of about 7.5% a year, slower than the 11.2% figure for the wider US market, hints at more limited top line momentum.
If that slower growth profile leaves you wanting stronger potential, use the urgency to scan companies in the screener containing 25 high quality undiscovered gems and spot ideas with fresher growth stories.
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.
