Middlesex Water (MSEX) Net Margin Strengthens Community Views Of Steady Profitability
Simply Wall St·05/01/2026 23:39:53
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Middlesex Water (MSEX) opened 2026 with Q1 revenue of US$48.7 million and basic EPS of US$0.57, alongside trailing twelve month revenue of US$199.1 million and EPS of US$2.40 as investors weigh these figures against the current share price around US$50.93. Over the past five reported quarters, revenue has ranged from US$44.3 million to US$54.1 million while quarterly EPS has moved between US$0.47 and US$0.77. This gives you a clearer sense of how the latest print fits into the recent earnings pattern. With a net margin reported at 22%, higher than a year ago, the focus this quarter is on how consistent profitability aligns with expectations for future growth and cash generation.
With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to set these results against the most common narratives around Middlesex Water, highlighting where the data supports the story and where it raises fresh questions.
NasdaqGS:MSEX Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at May 2026
22% margin points to solid profitability
Middlesex Water reports a 22% net profit margin on trailing twelve month revenue of US$199.1 million and net income of US$43.9 million, which means roughly US$0.22 of every revenue dollar is kept as profit.
What stands out for a more bullish view is that this margin sits alongside trailing EPS of US$2.40, a five year EPS growth rate of 2.6% per year and forecast earnings growth of 12.64% per year. Critics can point out that last year’s 1.9% earnings growth is below the five year pace and raises questions about how reliably higher growth can be achieved.
Supporters can highlight the steady profit pool implied by US$43.9 million of trailing net income and the margin level, which together suggest the business is producing consistent profits even as growth has been modest.
Skeptical investors may instead focus on the gap between the 1.9% earnings growth over the last year and the 12.64% forecast, viewing that difference as something that still needs to be earned rather than taken for granted.
The stock trades on a 21.6x P/E, compared with 15.8x for the Global Water Utilities industry average and 23.8x for its peer group. A cited DCF fair value of US$49.83 is slightly below the current share price of US$50.93.
What is interesting for valuation focused investors is how this middle of the road P/E and the DCF fair value interact with the mix of modest trailing earnings growth and higher forecasts. This creates tension between investors who see the current pricing as reasonable and those who would prefer a larger discount against the DCF figure.
Supporters of the current pricing can point out that a P/E below the 23.8x peer average is consistent with a company that has grown earnings at 2.6% per year over five years and is expected to grow faster than that, even if those expectations are below broader US market forecasts.
More cautious investors can counter that paying above the 15.8x global industry multiple and slightly above the DCF fair value while earnings growth over the last year was just 1.9% leaves limited room for disappointment if the forecasts are not met.
Cash flow coverage is the key weak spot
The company’s 2.83% dividend yield is not well covered by free cash flow and operating cash flow does not comfortably cover debt. This means the balance sheet relies on cash generation that is described as tight relative to these obligations.
What matters for a more bearish reading of the story is that this weaker cash flow coverage sits next to the 22% net margin and steady EPS line. Critics can argue that reported profitability does not automatically translate into flexible cash that can both service debt and sustain dividends, while supporters may view the same numbers as evidence that the underlying business remains profitable even if cash timing is less forgiving.
Those emphasizing risk will point to the specific flags that debt is not well covered by operating cash flow and that the dividend is not well covered by free cash flow, seeing these as constraints on how much the company can do without adding pressure to the balance sheet.
Investors with a more constructive stance may counter that a 2.83% yield combined with consistent net income of US$43.9 million and EPS of US$2.40 still offers an income stream, provided they are comfortable with the tighter cash flow coverage and the trade off between debt service and distributions.
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 Middlesex Water'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.
Reading through this, do you feel the balance of concerns and potential rewards is clear enough, or does it prompt more questions for you as an investor? Take a moment to check the underlying data, weigh the signals that matter most to your goals, and then go deeper into the 3 key rewards and 2 important warning signs
See What Else Is Out There
The earnings picture for Middlesex Water mixes a 22% net margin and steady EPS with tight cash flow coverage and a dividend that is not well backed by free cash.
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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