Titan International (TWI) Deepening EPS Losses Challenge Bullish Margin Recovery Narratives

Titan International, Inc.

Titan International, Inc.

TWI

0.00

Titan International (TWI) has kicked off the Q1 2026 reporting cycle with a recent stretch of results that show revenue between US$383.6 million and US$490.7 million per quarter and basic EPS moving from a profit of US$0.02 in Q4 2024 to a loss of US$0.88 in Q4 2025. Over the past six reported quarters, the company has seen revenue range from US$383.6 million to US$490.7 million, while basic EPS shifted from US$0.02 to losses of up to US$0.88. This sets a clear backdrop for how margins have come under pressure.

See our full analysis for Titan International.

With the recent numbers on the table, the next step is to see how this earnings profile matches up against the most common narratives investors follow about Titan International and where those stories might need updating.

NYSE:TWI Earnings & Revenue History as at May 2026
NYSE:TWI Earnings & Revenue History as at May 2026

Losses widen to US$63.5 million over the last year

  • Over the trailing twelve months, Titan International reported net income losses of US$63.5 million on US$1.83b of revenue, which lines up with the five year pattern of losses increasing at about 25.1% per year.
  • Consensus narrative expects margins to improve over time, yet the trailing data still shows net losses and no reported shift to profitability, which sits awkwardly against the idea that easing trade pressures and government support alone will translate into stronger earnings.
    • Analysts in the consensus narrative are working off an earnings path that reaches US$52.5 million by around 2028, while the latest trailing figures still show losses rather than profits.
    • That difference means the consensus view leans on future margin improvement that is not yet reflected in the recent US$63.5 million loss or the quarterly net losses across 2025.

Quarterly EPS swung from small loss to US$0.88 loss

  • Basic EPS moved from a loss of US$0.01 in Q1 2025 to a loss of US$0.88 in Q4 2025, with net income excluding extra items dipping from a US$0.6 million loss to a US$56.0 million loss over that same stretch.
  • Bears highlight a five year pattern of worsening losses, and the 2025 quarterly results fit that concern by showing multiple loss making quarters and a particularly weak Q4 print.
    • The sequence of net losses of roughly US$0.6 million, US$4.5 million, US$2.3 million and then US$56.0 million through 2025 supports the bearish focus on earnings pressure rather than quick repair.
    • With no profit making quarter in the 2025 data provided, the bearish view that Titan is exposed to swings in demand and margin pressure finds support in the recent EPS pattern.
Skeptics warn that a year of deepening losses can matter more than any future narrative until the income statement starts to turn, especially when the most recent quarter shows the steepest loss, so it helps to read that view in full before deciding how much risk fits your own plan. 🐻 Titan International Bear Case

Cheap sales multiple versus DCF fair value and targets

  • With a current share price of US$7.62, Titan trades on a P/S of 0.3x compared with 5.1x for peers and 2.2x for the wider US Machinery industry, while the provided DCF fair value of about US$9.02 and an analyst price target of US$11.75 both sit above the current price.
  • Bullish investors point to this combination of low P/S, DCF fair value above market and an implied upside to the US$11.75 target, yet the trailing losses and lack of near term profitability forecasts mean the valuation gap depends heavily on those more optimistic assumptions.
    • The stock is described as trading roughly 15.5% below the DCF fair value, so the bullish case leans on future cash flows improving enough to close that gap even though trailing earnings are negative.
    • Analysts in the provided data suggest about 54.2% upside to their price target from the current US$7.62 level, while the company remains unprofitable and not forecast to be profitable within three years, which is a key tension for anyone leaning on the bullish narrative.
Bulls argue that when valuation signals and analyst targets line up despite weak trailing earnings, it can be worth understanding exactly what growth and margin shift they are baking in. 🐂 Titan International 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 Titan International on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

Seeing a mix of weak earnings, low P/S and differing narratives, it makes sense to look at the details yourself and decide how comfortable you are with the balance between risk and potential reward. To help you weigh both sides, start with the 2 key rewards and 2 important warning signs.

See What Else Is Out There

Titan International is wrestling with deepening losses, weak EPS and pressured margins. Profitability remains absent in the most recent annual and quarterly figures.

If those loss making trends make you cautious about concentration risk, it is worth spreading your research across companies in the 75 resilient stocks with low risk scores that score better on stability and downside protection.

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.