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Honda Q1 Earnings Surpass Expectations, Revenues Rise Y/Y
Honda MotorHonda Motor(US:HMC) ZACKS·2025-08-15 15:45

Core Insights - Honda reported earnings of $0.97 per share for Q1 fiscal 2026, exceeding the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.51, but down from $1.57 in the same quarter last year [1][10] - Quarterly revenues reached $37 billion, slightly below the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $37.8 billion, but higher than $34.7 billion from the previous year [1] Segmental Highlights - The Automobile segment's revenues increased by 1.1% year over year to ¥3.54 trillion ($24.4 billion), but it incurred an operating loss of ¥29.6 billion ($204 million), contrasting with an operating income of ¥222.8 billion in the same quarter last year [2] - Motorcycle segment revenues were approximately ¥951.6 billion ($6.58 billion), up 1.5% year over year, with an operating profit of ¥189 billion ($1.30 billion), reflecting a 6.8% increase year over year [3] - Financial Services segment revenues totaled ¥832.6 billion ($5.76 billion), down 11.4% year over year, with operating profit remaining flat at ¥85 billion ($588 million) [3] - Power Products and Other Businesses generated revenues of ¥92.8 billion ($641 million), a decrease of 2.2% year over year, but the operating loss narrowed to ¥219 million from ¥753 million in the same period last year [4] Financials & FY26 Outlook - As of June 30, 2025, Honda's consolidated cash and cash equivalents stood at ¥4.01 trillion ($27.7 billion), with long-term debt around ¥6.95 trillion ($48.1 billion) [5] - For fiscal 2026, Honda projects consolidated sales volumes of 14.25 million units for Motorcycles, 2.83 million units for Automobiles, and 3.67 million units for Power Products, indicating a 4.1% growth in Motorcycles but declines of 0.3% and 0.8% in Automobiles and Power Products, respectively [6] - Honda forecasts fiscal 2026 revenues of ¥21.1 trillion, a decline of 2.7% year over year, with an operating profit expected at ¥700 billion, down 42.3% year over year, and a pretax profit forecasted at ¥710 billion, suggesting a drop of 46.1% year over year, attributed to macroeconomic and tariff-related challenges [7]