VEF (OM:VEFAB) Stock Faces Q2 Loss That Tests Bullish Recovery Narratives

Simply Wall St · 1d ago

VEF (OM:VEFAB) has just reported Q2 2026 results with total revenue of a loss of US$0.24 million and a net loss of US$2.59 million, translating into basic EPS of a loss of US$0.0031. The company has seen quarterly revenue shift from US$27.60 million in Q2 2025 to a loss of US$0.24 million in Q2 2026. Basic EPS moved from US$0.0206 to a loss of US$0.0031 over the same period, setting a very different backdrop for the latest update. For investors, the key focus is now how VEF balances these headline revenue and EPS pressures with any underlying margin resilience or compression that might influence the stock.

See our full analysis for VEF.

With the numbers on the table, the next step is to see how VEF's latest earnings align with the dominant narratives around its valuation, risks, and long term earnings potential, and where those stories may need to be updated.

Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives

OM:VEFAB Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Jul 2026
OM:VEFAB Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Jul 2026

VEF swings from US$32 million profit to US$2.6 million loss

  • Net income moved from US$32.19 million in Q3 2025 and US$27.99 million in Q4 2025 to a loss of US$25.35 million in Q1 2026 and a loss of US$2.59 million in Q2 2026, showing that the profitable quarters in 2025 were followed by two loss making periods.
  • What stands out for a bullish view is that the trailing twelve month net income is still US$32.24 million even after the recent losses, which contrasts with the quarterly figures and raises the question of whether bulls focus more on the rolling 12 month picture than on the most recent setbacks.
    • Supporters who point to the trailing twelve month basic EPS of US$0.037 as a sign of underlying profitability have to weigh that against the Q2 2026 basic EPS loss of US$0.0031.
    • Critics of the bullish angle can point out that a reported annualised earnings decline of 13.3% over five years sits in the background of this recent return to loss making quarters.

Curious how others are interpreting VEF's swing from recent profits to fresh losses and what it might mean for the longer term story? 📊 Read the what the Community is saying about VEF.

Trailing EPS trends versus latest VEF loss

  • On a trailing twelve month basis, basic EPS is US$0.037 in Q2 2026, compared with quarterly basic EPS moving from US$0.031 in Q3 2025 and US$0.027 in Q4 2025 to a loss of US$0.025 in Q1 2026 and a smaller loss of US$0.0031 in Q2 2026.
  • Consensus style thinking that treats VEF as a recovering earnings story is tested by the fact that the trailing twelve month EPS remains positive while the most recent quarters show losses, creating a split between investors who focus on the rolling year and those who concentrate on the latest data.
    • Supporters of the recovery angle can point to trailing twelve month net income of US$32.24 million, which still reflects the strong Q3 and Q4 2025 results.
    • Investors who are more cautious may highlight that the last two quarters together produced losses of US$27.93 million, which materially offsets the prior period strength.

Low 5.8x P/E and 69% DCF gap frame VEF valuation

  • VEF trades on a trailing P/E of 5.8x compared with 21.7x for the Swedish Capital Markets industry and 11.3x for peers, and the provided DCF fair value of SEK 5.72 sits well above the current share price of SEK 1.77, implying a gap of about 69% to that DCF estimate.
  • Analysts with a bullish stance might argue that a share price of SEK 1.77, far below both the DCF fair value of SEK 5.72 and the analyst price target of SEK 3.03, heavily supports a valuation driven upside case, yet those same figures sit alongside the five year annualised earnings decline of 13.3% which keeps the bullish thesis reliant on how investors weigh cheap multiples against that history.
    • The bullish side can also point to the company being profitable over the last year on a trailing basis, which is consistent with having a positive P/E at a time when the most recent quarter is loss making.
    • Investors who question the bullish angle can note that even with a low P/E and the DCF gap, the recent quarterly losses in Q1 and Q2 2026 show that earnings have not been consistently positive in the latest periods.

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 VEF'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.

Seeing both risks and rewards in VEF's latest numbers and valuation context, it makes sense to review the full data set yourself, compare the recent losses with the trailing profitability, and weigh the upside case against the concerns highlighted in the 3 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.

See What Else Is Out There Beyond VEF

VEF has shifted from recent quarterly profits to fresh losses and carries a reported five year annualised earnings decline of 13.3%, which may concern more cautious investors.

If those setbacks make you want more resilient earnings profiles, check out the 286 resilient stocks with low risk scores to quickly spot companies with steadier fundamentals and lower overall risk.

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.