Commercial Vehicle Group (CVGI) Returns To Quarterly Profit Challenging Persistent Loss Narratives
Simply Wall St·05/07 00:47
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Commercial Vehicle Group (CVGI) opened 2026 with Q1 revenue of US$171.5 million and basic EPS of US$0.03, alongside net income from continuing operations of US$0.9 million. This set a clear marker after a run of quarterly losses. Over the past year, the company has seen quarterly revenue move between US$152.5 million and US$172.0 million, while basic EPS ranged from a loss of US$1.04 in Q4 2024 to a loss of US$0.19 in Q4 2025 before reaching a small profit in Q1 2026. This gives investors fresh data points on how margins are tracking through the cycle. For anyone watching this stock, the latest print is less about a single quarter and more about whether these margin signals suggest a more sustainable earnings profile.
With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how these results line up against the widely followed narratives around Commercial Vehicle Group's growth prospects, risks, and profitability profile.
NasdaqGS:CVGI Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026
TTM loss of US$16.4 million keeps profitability under pressure
On a trailing twelve month basis, Commercial Vehicle Group reported total revenue of US$650.7 million and a net loss from continuing operations of US$16.4 million, with basic EPS at a loss of US$0.48.
Consensus narrative expects earnings to reach US$19.4 million by around 2029, yet the recent loss and interest coverage issues create a clear tension with that view.
Analysts are looking for profit margins to move from a loss of 3.2% to a 2.6% margin in three years. However, the last twelve months still show unprofitable operations and trailing losses that have grown at an average rate of 37.6% per year over five years.
Revenue is characterized at 4.1% to 4.5% expected annual growth against an 11.3% market reference. As a result, the consensus implies margin repair and mix improvement on a revenue base that is not projected to grow as quickly as the broader US market.
Q1 return to profit against a weak recent history
Q1 2026 delivered net income from continuing operations of US$0.9 million and basic EPS of about US$0.03, compared with quarterly losses through 2025 including a US$35.0 million loss and US$1.04 loss per share in Q4 2024.
Bulls argue that restructuring and higher content programs can turn these small profits into a more durable earnings base, but the recent track record still leans the other way.
The bullish narrative assumes revenue can grow about 5.5% per year and margins can move from a loss of 3.2% to a 3.2% profit margin, yet trailing twelve month figures still show a US$16.4 million loss and basic EPS in negative territory.
Supporters point to free cash flow of roughly US$33 million in 2025 and net leverage falling from 4.7x to 4.1x, which helps the bullish case. At the same time, interest expense was reported as higher than adjusted EBITDA in one recent quarter, which keeps the earnings turnaround thesis heavily dependent on execution.
On a quarter like this, where the company swings back to a small profit after deeper losses, bulls focus on whether cost cuts and new programs can compound from here, while the financial history reminds you how thin the margin for error has been so far. 🐂 Commercial Vehicle Group Bull Case
Low P/S multiple versus 63.28 DCF fair value
The stock trades on a P/S of about 0.3x against a peer average of 0.4x and a US Machinery industry average of 2.1x, and the provided DCF fair value is US$63.28 compared with a current share price of US$5.20.
Bears highlight that this discount sits alongside forecasts for continued losses and leverage concerns rather than clear evidence of an earnings recovery.
Forecasts in the input indicate the company is expected to remain unprofitable over the next three years, while trailing twelve month earnings are still a US$16.4 million loss. As a result, the low multiple is being set on sales, not on positive EPS.
Major financial risk flags include interest payments that are not well covered by earnings and a share price that has been highly volatile over the past three months. This supports the bearish view that the discount and gap to DCF fair value reflect meaningful earnings and balance sheet risk rather than a simple mispricing.
For a stock trading this far below both the analyst target of US$5.00 and the DCF fair value, skeptics focus on leverage, interest coverage, and the timeline to consistent profits before treating the low P/S as a straightforward bargain. 🐻 Commercial Vehicle 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 Commercial Vehicle 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? Take a closer look at the figures, pressure test the bullish and bearish cases, and weigh the 2 key rewards and 2 important warning signs
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Commercial Vehicle Group's recent US$16.4 million trailing loss, thin interest coverage, and reliance on a low P/S multiple highlight pressure on profitability and balance sheet resilience.
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.
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