NYSE • USD • TECHNOLOGY • SCIENTIFIC & TECHNICAL INSTRUMENTS
Current price is 55.6% of 52-week range
Overall score updated 7 days ago
Score confidence 100%
Overall Score
Score Breakdown
Momentum Signal
Last updated 11 days ago
Garmin’s moat is built on trusted hardware, deep sensor/IP, and a broad ecosystem spanning fitness, outdoor, aviation, marine, and auto OEM, which reduces reliance on any single end market. Q1 2026 results show the platform is still taking share in wearables: Fitness revenue rose 42% year over year to $547M, helping offset a 5% decline in Outdoor to $418M. Ongoing product cadence (e.g., new Forerunner launches) reinforces stickiness and pricing power, but competitive pressure in smartwatches remains the key structural threat.
Financially, momentum is strong: Q1 2026 revenue was a record $1.753B (+14% y/y) with a 59.4% gross margin and 24.6% operating margin, and GAAP EPS of $2.09 (pro forma $2.08). Management maintained FY2026 revenue guidance of about $7.9B, implying confidence in demand durability. Balance-sheet flexibility looks solid with roughly $2.8B of cash/marketable securities (FY2025), supporting buybacks/dividends (about $4.20 annualized; ~1.8% yield), though valuation appears mid-to-high 20s P/E based on market quotes and is less forgiving if growth cools.
The 12-month thesis is that Garmin can compound earnings via mix shift toward higher-margin Fitness/Aviation and operating leverage, while using its cash-rich balance sheet to sustain shareholder returns. Key catalysts include continued wearables share gains, sustained aviation/marine demand, and upside if Outdoor rebounds in the second half as new products roll through. Key risks are premium valuation, margin pressure from costs/tariffs, and Auto OEM staying structurally low-return during program transitions.
Recommendation: HOLD. Strong fundamentals and guidance support a durable growth story, but the current valuation leaves less margin of safety if segment momentum normalizes or competition intensifies.