Movado Group (MOV) Margin Improvement Tests Bullish Earnings Narratives
Simply Wall St·4d ago
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Movado Group (MOV) has wrapped up FY 2026 with fourth quarter revenue of US$191.6 million and basic EPS of US$0.55, supported by trailing twelve month revenue of US$671.3 million and EPS of US$1.17, alongside a 44.6% earnings increase over the past year. Over recent quarters, the company has seen revenue move from US$174.7 million and EPS of US$0.30 in Q4 FY 2025 to US$191.6 million and EPS of US$0.55 in Q4 FY 2026. At the same time, trailing net profit margin has shifted from 2.8% to 4%, setting up a results season where attention naturally falls on how efficiently those sales are turning into profit. Overall, the release puts margins and earnings quality at the center of the story for investors watching how profit growth is being built.
With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how this earnings profile lines up with the widely followed narratives around Movado's growth, profitability and risks, and where those stories may need updating.
NYSE:MOV Earnings & Revenue History as at Mar 2026
Margins Improve as Profit Outpaces Sales
Over the last 12 months, Movado generated US$671.3 million in revenue and US$26.6 million in net income, which works out to a 4% net margin compared with 2.8% a year earlier.
Analysts' consensus view leans on higher profitability, and the current figures partly support that while also testing it:
Consensus talks up operating efficiencies and cost savings, and the move from a 2.8% to 4% margin aligns with that focus on tighter execution.
At the same time, consensus highlights tariff and inventory risks, and a 4% margin still leaves limited room if those pressures show up more strongly in future periods.
Earnings Growth Outruns Modest Sales
Trailing earnings grew 44.6% year on year while revenue is forecast to grow about 1.5% per year, so most of the profit story currently comes from margin and efficiency gains rather than big top line expansion.
Consensus narrative expects international growth and digital channels to support the bullish side of that earnings story, but the data show a mixed picture:
Supportive for bulls, trailing twelve month EPS rose from US$0.82 to US$1.17 alongside the margin move to 4%, which lines up with the idea that operational changes are feeding through to the bottom line.
More cautious for bulls, forecasts calling for about 23.6% annual earnings growth versus only 1.5% revenue growth assume that margin gains continue to do most of the heavy lifting, which is a higher bar than the recent sales trend alone would suggest.
On this earnings profile, bulls argue Movado’s profit momentum has more room to run, while the modest revenue outlook keeps expectations honest, and that tension is exactly what the dedicated bull case tackles in more depth 🐂 Movado Group Bull Case
Dividend Coverage and Valuation Trade Off
Movado trades at US$25.23 with a trailing P/E of 21x, slightly above the DCF fair value of US$24.22 but below the cited peer average of 36.8x, while its 5.55% dividend yield is flagged as not well covered by trailing earnings.
Bears focus on income coverage and business risks, and the current numbers give them specific points to lean on:
The combination of a 4% net margin and a 5.55% yield that is not well covered by earnings raises questions around how comfortably that payout sits against a relatively thin profit base.
Concerns around tariffs, licensed brand dependence and inventory build look more pressing when the stock already sits a little above a DCF fair value of US$24.22, which limits the valuation cushion if those risks bite harder.
Skeptics argue that a premium to DCF fair value and a dividend not fully covered by earnings deserve a closer look before leaning on the income story 🐻 Movado Group Bear 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 Movado Group on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
Mixed messages in the data so far? Use this as a starting point. Move quickly to test the numbers against your own expectations, then weigh up the 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.
See What Else Is Out There
Movado’s thin 4% net margin, dividend that is not well covered by earnings, and exposure to tariffs and inventory risks leave limited room for error.
If those pressure points concern you, shift some attention toward companies screened for stronger cushions and steadier profiles by checking out 72 resilient stocks with low risk scores.
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