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Galilei (TSE:6420) Margin Slippage Reignites Bearish Narratives After FY 2026 Q3 Results

Simply Wall St·05/03/2026 00:49:31
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Galilei (TSE:6420) has put fresh numbers on the table for FY 2026, with third quarter revenue of ¥33,619 million and basic EPS of ¥77.87, while trailing twelve month EPS sits at ¥305.44 on revenue of ¥137,372 million as investors weigh those figures against a net margin that has eased from 9.7% to 8.9% over the past year. Over recent reporting periods, revenue has ranged between ¥32,215 million and ¥35,750 million per quarter and basic EPS between ¥64.32 and ¥87.23. This sets a backdrop where multi year earnings growth contrasts with more muted one year progress and slightly softer profitability, so the current release puts margins and their resilience firmly in focus.

See our full analysis for Galilei.

With the headline results in place, the next step is to set these numbers against the most widely held narratives about Galilei to see which views are supported and which may need a rethink.

Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives

TSE:6420 Earnings & Revenue History as at May 2026
TSE:6420 Earnings & Revenue History as at May 2026

Five year EPS growth vs 0.3% one year rise

  • Reported earnings grew 12.9% per year over the last five years, while earnings over the most recent twelve months grew 0.3% and trailing twelve month EPS is ¥305.44.
  • What stands out for the bullish narrative is the contrast between that 12.9% multi year growth rate and the flatter 0.3% recent result, which:
    • Supports the bullish view that Galilei has built a solid profit base over time, with trailing twelve month net income of ¥12,240 million on ¥137,372 million of revenue.
    • At the same time gives bears some backing when they point to the more modest recent progress as a reason to question how much weight to put on the longer term growth record.

Margins slip from 9.7% to 8.9%

  • Trailing net margin is 8.9% compared with 9.7% a year ago, with recent quarterly net income ranging from ¥2,576 million to ¥3,495 million on quarterly revenue between ¥32,215 million and ¥35,750 million.
  • Critics highlight the 0.8 percentage point margin change as a key bearish talking point, and the numbers here:
    • Back up that concern, because the margin line now sits below last year even though revenue over the trailing twelve months has reached ¥137,372 million.
    • Also show that, despite the pullback, profitability is still positive and consistent across recent quarters, which is a factor bullish investors may focus on when weighing that margin shift.

P/E of 11.7x and DCF fair value gap

  • The shares trade on a trailing P/E of 11.7x at a ¥3,580 price, compared with a JP Machinery industry average P/E of 14.7x and a peer average of 16.4x, while the DCF fair value is ¥3,921.69.
  • Supporters often point to this valuation gap as a bullish sign, and the figures here:
    • Show the current price sits about 8.7% below the DCF fair value and below both peer and industry P/E levels, which heavily supports the idea that the market is pricing Galilei more conservatively than many comparables.
    • Sit alongside a 2.26% dividend yield that is not well covered by free cash flow, a detail bearish investors may use to argue that the lower multiple also reflects caution around cash generation and future distributions.

To see how other investors are interpreting these valuation gaps and growth trends, and how that stacks up against their own narratives about Galilei, check out the Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives

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 Galilei'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.

Mixed signals so far, with solid earnings history, softer margins and a valuation gap that splits opinions. It makes sense to check the finer details yourself. If you want a quick way to see how that balance of concerns and positives stacks up, start with the 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign

See What Else Is Out There

Galilei’s softer margin at 8.9%, modest 0.3% one year earnings growth and less than fully covered dividend highlight pressure on recent profitability and cash generation.

If you want income ideas where dividends look better supported by underlying cash flows, it is worth checking stocks in the 37 dividend fortresses

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.