Sino-Ocean Group Holding (SEHK:3377) Profit Rebound Challenges Bearish Earnings Narratives
Simply Wall St·03/29/2026 00:16:26
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Sino-Ocean Group Holding (SEHK:3377) has swung back into the black in FY 2025, reporting first half revenue of about CN¥6.2 billion and basic EPS of CN¥1.17, set against a trailing twelve month revenue base of roughly CN¥14.8 billion and EPS of CN¥0.66 that reflects a CN¥45.6 billion one off gain. Over the past three reported half year periods, revenue has moved from about CN¥13.3 billion with an EPS loss of CN¥0.71 in 1H 2024, to CN¥10.3 billion with an EPS loss of CN¥1.74 in 2H 2024, and then to CN¥6.2 billion with an EPS profit of CN¥1.17 in 1H 2025. This sequence gives investors a mixed picture of top line scale, while also showing a clear rebound in reported profitability that raises fresh questions about how durable current margins really are.
With the headline figures set, the next step is to see how these results line up against the most common narratives around Sino-Ocean Group Holding, highlighting where the numbers confirm the story and where they start to push back.
SEHK:3377 Earnings & Revenue History as at Mar 2026
CN¥10.2b profit in 1H 2025 despite revenue shrinking
Net income excluding extra items moved from losses of CN¥5.4b in 1H 2024 and CN¥13.2b in 2H 2024 to a profit of about CN¥10.2b in 1H 2025, even as revenue in those periods stepped down from CN¥13.3b to CN¥10.3b and then to CN¥6.2b.
What stands out for a bullish view is how profit swung into positive territory while revenue roughly halved over these three halves. This supports the idea that factors beyond simple sales volume are driving the CN¥10.2b result, yet the earlier losses of CN¥5.4b and CN¥13.2b keep reminding investors that this level of profitability has not been consistent over time.
Backers of a bullish angle can point to the latest net income excluding extra items as a sign the business can operate profitably, but the sharp contrast with recent multi billion losses encourages a closer look at how repeatable this margin profile is.
For a beginner investor, this mix suggests the income statement has moved from deep loss to profit very quickly, so treating 1H 2025 as a steady state on its own would not reflect the volatility shown across the last three reported halves.
TTM profit shaped by CN¥45.6b one off gain
Over the trailing twelve months to 2H 2025, net income excluding extra items totals about CN¥6.8b on revenue of roughly CN¥14.8b, but that period also includes a CN¥45.6b one off gain that lifts reported EPS to CN¥0.66 and feeds into the current valuation metrics.
Critics highlight that the return to profitability over the last year and the very low trailing P/E of 0.1x may look appealing, yet the single CN¥45.6b non recurring gain and earlier five year earnings decline of 17.1% per year mean the trailing EPS is not a clean guide to underlying performance.
The fact that a CN¥45.6b gain sits alongside a trailing net income excluding extra items of only CN¥6.8b shows how much of the reported bottom line comes from that one event rather than ongoing operations.
When you see positive EPS of CN¥0.66 after a stretch of losses, it helps to remember that without this one off, the last twelve months would look very different and the headline profit picture would be less supportive for a simple earnings based view.
The trailing P/E of 0.1x sits far below peer companies at 13.3x, the Hong Kong real estate industry at 11.7x and the wider Hong Kong market at 11.9x, even though the share price is just HK$0.08.
What is striking for a bearish angle is that such a large gap in P/E multiples persists despite the company swinging back to reported profitability. This lines up with concerns about weak operating cash flow coverage of debt and substantial shareholder dilution over the past year.
Bears argue that if earnings quality were stronger and cash generation comfortably covered debt, the P/E would likely sit closer to the 11.7x industry level instead of 0.1x, so the current discount looks tied to balance sheet worries rather than being purely a bargain signal.
The combination of a low share price at HK$0.08, a return to profit on paper and recent dilution suggests the market is paying close attention to how much future cash flow is available for creditors and remaining shareholders, not just to the latest EPS number.
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 Sino-Ocean Group Holding'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.
The mix of risks and rewards in this story is hard to ignore. Take a moment to review the figures yourself and decide whether the trade off fits your style, then look at the 2 key rewards and 3 important warning signs
See What Else Is Out There
The sharp earnings swings, heavy reliance on a CN¥45.6b one off gain and weak cash flow coverage of debt all point to elevated risk for shareholders.
If that level of uncertainty feels uncomfortable, use the 277 resilient stocks with low risk scores to quickly spot companies where earnings patterns and balance sheets look more resilient and predictable.
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.