Tribune Resources (ASX:TBR) Net Margin Jump Reinforces Bullish Profitability Narratives
Simply Wall St·03/15/2026 00:36:04
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Tribune Resources H1 2026 earnings snapshot
Tribune Resources (ASX:TBR) has put fresh numbers on the table for H1 2026, with revenue of A$97.3 million, basic EPS of A$0.58 and trailing twelve month EPS of A$0.84 framing the latest read on profitability. The company has seen revenue move from A$91.6 million in H1 2025 to A$68.8 million in H2 2025 and then to A$97.3 million in H1 2026. Basic EPS shifted from A$0.37 to A$0.27 across 2025 halves before landing at A$0.58 this half, giving investors a clear view of how the top and bottom line have tracked through the recent cycle. With trailing net profit margins higher than a year ago, this result puts profitability squarely in focus for anyone weighing the current earnings story.
With the headline figures set, the next step is to see how these results line up with the most widely held narratives about Tribune Resources and where the numbers start to push back on those views.
ASX:TBR Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Mar 2026
26.6% net margin changes the profitability picture
Over the last 12 months, Tribune converted A$166.1 million of revenue into A$44.2 million of net income, which works out to a 26.6% net profit margin compared with 9.1% in the prior year period.
What stands out for a bullish read is that this 26.6% margin sits alongside trailing EPS of A$0.84 on A$166.1 million of revenue. Together, these figures suggest the business currently turns a relatively small revenue base into earnings more efficiently than it did when margins were at 9.1%.
Supporters who focus on profitability can point to the A$44.2 million of trailing net income as evidence that recent operations have converted a larger share of sales into profit than in the prior year.
At the same time, the five year record shows average earnings falling 6.7% per year, which reminds you that this higher margin period sits against a longer history where earnings trended the other way.
Revenue and EPS swings across recent halves
Across the last three halves, revenue moved from A$91.6 million in H1 2025 to A$68.8 million in H2 2025 and then to A$97.3 million in H1 2026, while basic EPS shifted from A$0.37 to A$0.27 and then to A$0.58 over the same periods.
Viewed through a more cautious lens, these swings match the bearish concern that earnings are not on a smooth upward path, with the five year annualised earnings trend showing a 6.7% decline per year even though trailing 12 month earnings are very large compared with the prior year.
Critics highlight that net income for individual halves moved between A$19.2 million, A$14.1 million and A$30.2 million, which lines up with the idea that profitability can move around from period to period.
The contrast between the very large 256.2% uplift in earnings over the last year and the 6.7% annualised decline over five years gives bears a concrete data point to argue that one strong year does not erase the longer record.
Low 7x P/E and DCF gap pull valuation into focus
At a share price of A$5.88 and trailing EPS of A$0.84, Tribune trades on a P/E of 7x, which is below the Australian Metals & Mining industry average of 16.4x, the broader Australian market at 18.7x and the peer average of 36.3x, while the stated DCF fair value is A$4.11 per share.
For investors weighing a bullish versus bearish read, this creates a clear tension. The low 7x P/E supports a value angle compared with those benchmarks, yet the share price sits above the A$4.11 DCF fair value and earnings over five years have declined at an average rate of 6.7% per year.
Supporters who emphasise the low multiple can point to the gap between 7x and the industry’s 16.4x P/E, along with the 26.6% trailing net margin, as evidence that the market price does not fully credit current profitability when set beside peers.
On the other hand, anyone leaning bearish can highlight the A$5.88 price versus the A$4.11 DCF fair value and the five year earnings decline to argue that the market is already paying more than that modelled cash flow figure despite the longer term earnings track record.
Don't just look at this quarter; the real story is in the long-term trend. We've done an in-depth analysis on Tribune Resources'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.
Unsure how to feel after weighing the bullish and bearish angles around Tribune Resources? Take a moment to review the raw figures yourself and act while the details are fresh. Then round out your view with 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.
See What Else Is Out There
Tribune Resources combines a low 7x P/E with a 6.7% five year earnings decline and uneven half year results, which raises questions about consistency.
If that choppy record makes you hesitant to rely on a single name, spread your research across our 5 high quality undervalued stocks and see where value and fundamentals line up more cleanly.
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.