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Box Q1 2027 Margin Compression Challenges Bullish Profitability Narratives
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Box (BOX) opened Q1 2027 with total revenue of US$305.9 million and basic EPS of US$0.09 on net income of US$11.9 million, setting a measured tone for the new fiscal year. Over the past five reported quarters, revenue has moved from US$276.3 million in Q1 2026 to US$305.9 million in Q1 2027, while basic EPS has ranged from US$0.02 to US$0.48, giving investors a clear view of how the top line and per share earnings have tracked through recent periods. With trailing net profit margins below their prior year level, the focus now is on how Box balances growth with profitability in the quarters ahead.

See our full analysis for Box.

With the headline numbers reported, the next step is to compare these results with the most common narratives around Box to see which views the data supports and which might need to be reconsidered.

See what the community is saying about Box

NYSE:BOX Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026
NYSE:BOX Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026

Margins Reset, Profit Trails Revenue

  • Over the last 12 months, Box earned US$95.4 million of net income on US$1.21b of revenue, which works out to a 7.9% trailing net profit margin compared with 17.6% in the prior year.
  • Consensus narrative points to AI powered content management and compliance as drivers of better pricing and margins, yet the move from 17.6% to 7.9% margin shows that, for now, higher revenue is not flowing through to profits in the way the consensus margin story implies.
    • The trailing revenue line has climbed from US$1.09b to US$1.21b, while trailing net income has gone from US$201.6 million to US$95.4 million, so earnings have not kept pace with the revenue base the way bulls or neutral narratives might hope.
    • For a reader, this means margin pressure is one of the key facts to weigh against any expectation of margin expansion tied to Box AI, Enterprise Advanced, or larger contracts.

Price Sits Well Below DCF Fair Value

  • Box trades at US$24.67 compared with a DCF fair value of about US$54.27, and carries a 35.8x P/E versus a 44.8x peer average and 30x for the broader US Software industry.
  • Bulls argue that deeper AI integration and a modular platform can support higher deal sizes and long term cash flows, and the roughly 54.5% gap to the DCF fair value heavily supports that bullish angle while the premium to the industry P/E keeps part of the bearish valuation push in play.
    • Forecasts for about 12.7% yearly earnings growth and 8.4% yearly revenue growth help explain why the stock trades above the wider industry on P/E even though it is below peers and well below the DCF fair value estimate.
    • At the same time, the lower 7.9% trailing margin versus 17.6% a year earlier gives bears concrete profit pressure to point to when they question whether that DCF fair value of US$54.27 is achievable.
On these numbers, bulls see the discount to DCF fair value as a potential opportunity while skeptics focus on whether margins can support that valuation gap over time, and that tug of war sits at the heart of the more optimistic narrative on Box.🐂 Box Bull Case

Margin Compression Fuels Bearish Concerns

  • Trailing net profit margin has moved from 17.6% to 7.9% over the last year, and the analysis notes that recent one year earnings growth was negative even though the five year average earnings growth rate was 60.4% per year.
  • Bears warn that competition from full suite cloud providers and rising compliance costs could keep pressure on margins, and the drop from 17.6% to 7.9% margin together with the negative recent single year earnings result gives that cautious view real backing despite Box posting US$95.4 million of trailing net income.
    • Even with trailing revenue reaching about US$1.21b, the shift in margin means a larger top line is not automatically translating into stronger profitability, which fits the bearish concern about pricing power and higher operating costs.
    • The fact that earnings have fallen over the most recent year, after several years of strong growth, lines up with the bearish point that relying heavily on upselling existing customers could make it harder to sustain the earlier pace of earnings expansion.
Stronger competition and higher regulatory costs are already visible in the recent margin compression and earnings setback, which is exactly what cautious investors point to when they argue for a more conservative outlook on Box.🐻 Box 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 Box on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

With both cautious and optimistic takes on Box in play, it makes sense to look at the underlying data yourself and decide how convincing each side really is. If you want a quick way to frame both the upside and the downside, start with these 2 key rewards and 2 important warning signs

See What Else Is Out There

Box is facing clear margin compression, with net profit margin moving from 17.6% to 7.9% while recent single year earnings have declined despite higher trailing revenue.

If that earnings and margin pressure makes you cautious, it is worth balancing your watchlist with companies that already screen well on 64 resilient stocks with low risk scores today.

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.

Disclaimer:This article represents the opinion of the author only. It does not represent the opinion of Webull, nor should it be viewed as an indication that Webull either agrees with or confirms the truthfulness or accuracy of the information. It should not be considered as investment advice from Webull or anyone else, nor should it be used as the basis of any investment decision.
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