--- title: "Yamami (TSE:2820) Margin At 7.4% Supports Defensive Narrative Despite Mixed Quarterly EPS" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/286543951.md" description: "Yamami (TSE:2820) reported Q3 2026 results with revenue of ¥5,952 million and EPS of ¥73.34, reflecting a net margin of 7.4%. Despite mixed quarterly performance, the company shows a 16.8% earnings growth over the past year, supported by a five-year growth rate of 23.7%. The stock trades at ¥3,810, 26.5% below its DCF fair value of ¥5,185.77, with a P/E of 15.8x compared to industry peers. Analysts expect continued growth, but caution remains due to the stock's valuation relative to earnings forecasts." datetime: "2026-05-15T10:05:27.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/286543951.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286543951.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/286543951.md) --- # Yamami (TSE:2820) Margin At 7.4% Supports Defensive Narrative Despite Mixed Quarterly EPS Yamami (TSE:2820) has just posted Q3 2026 results, with revenue of ¥5,952 million and basic EPS of ¥73.34, set against a trailing twelve month picture that includes EPS of ¥240.41 and net income of ¥1,675 million. Over recent quarters the company has seen revenue range from ¥5,181 million in Q4 2025 to ¥6,254 million in Q2 2026, while quarterly EPS moved between ¥39.47 and ¥95.88. This gives a clear view of how the top line and per share earnings have tracked into this latest print. With net margin sitting at 7.4% over the last year, the release points to a business where profitability is a central part of the story investors are weighing. See our full analysis for Yamami. With the latest figures on the table, the next step is to see how they compare with the widely followed narratives around Yamami's growth, quality, and long term earnings power. Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives ## TTM profit growth outpaces 8% revenue trend - Over the last 12 months, revenue is reported at ¥22,631 million with earnings of ¥1,675 million, which lines up with roughly 8% revenue growth and 16.8% earnings growth for the year. - What stands out for a more bullish angle is that five year earnings growth of 23.7% per year and the latest 16.8% one year gain are paired with a current net margin of 7.4%. Investors who like the “defensive food producer” story can point to a record that already reflects profit growth rather than just hoping it shows up later. - Supporters might also highlight that analysts expect earnings to grow around 8.7% per year and revenue around 8% per year, which keeps the growth story consistent with the trailing 12 month trends. - At the same time, the gap between the recent 16.8% earnings growth and the longer run 23.7% rate means anyone leaning bullish has to accept that the pace has not matched the five year average in the latest year. ## Margins steady as volumes fluctuate - Quarterly revenue has moved between ¥5,181 million and ¥6,254 million over the last five reported periods, yet trailing 12 month net margin sits at 7.4% compared with 7.0% a year earlier, showing that profitability has held up as sales move around. - Critics of a very bullish take often worry that a tofu focused food producer is exposed to raw material and pricing pressure, and the small margin move from 7.0% to 7.4% gives a mixed picture because it shows the company stayed profitable while quarterly revenue and EPS bounced between ¥5,181 million and ¥6,254 million of sales and between ¥39.47 and ¥95.88 of EPS. - On one hand, holding a 7% plus net margin through that revenue range suggests the business has kept a consistent level of profitability while conditions changed from Q2 2025 to Q3 2026. - On the other, the wide quarterly EPS range means bears can still argue that earnings per share can be quite sensitive to even modest shifts in revenue or costs. ## DCF says upside, P/E says caution - At a share price of ¥3,810, the stock sits about 26.5% below the ¥5,185.77 DCF fair value estimate, while trading on a 15.8x P/E compared with 11.8x for peers and 15.2x for the Japan food industry. - What is interesting for anyone weighing a more cautious angle is the tension between the DCF model, which points to room between the current price and ¥5,185.77, and the richer 15.8x P/E versus peers at 11.8x. Investors who focus on simple earnings multiples may see the stock as fully valued even though the DCF view points in the opposite direction. - Supporters of the DCF approach can point back to the 16.8% earnings growth and 7.4% net margin as inputs that help justify a higher intrinsic value than the market price suggests. - Investors who are more cautious can lean on the P/E comparison and the more modest forecast earnings growth of about 8.7% per year to argue that paying above peer multiples could be hard to justify if growth settles at that level. To see how these numbers feed into different storylines around growth, durability, and valuation, it is worth checking what other investors are saying about Yamami through current community narratives, sentiment breakdowns, and supporting data points, which you can review in more detail via the Curious how numbers become stories that shape markets? Explore Community Narratives ## 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 Yamami'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. If the mix of optimism and caution in this update feels familiar, use it as a prompt to move fast and test the story against the numbers yourself. To see which strengths are driving sentiment and decide whether they matter for your thesis, start with the 3 key rewards ## Explore Alternatives Yamami's weaker point is that earnings growth expectations sit closer to 8.7% while the stock trades at a richer 15.8x P/E than peers at 11.8x. If paying up for that kind of valuation feels uncomfortable, you can quickly compare it with other ideas that pair quality with more modest pricing using the 16 high quality undervalued stocks _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._ ### Related Stocks - [2820.JP](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/2820.JP.md) ## Related News & Research - [DaikyoNishikawa (TSE:4246) Margin Expansion Challenges Bearish Earnings Narratives](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286600710.md) - [Why Japan Communications' (TSE:9424) Shaky Earnings Are Just The Beginning Of Its Problems](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286824720.md) - [Analysts Have Made A Financial Statement On Sanwa Holdings Corporation's (TSE:5929) Full-Year Report](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286824737.md) - [Genki Global Dining Concepts (TSE:9828) Margin Compression Challenges Bullish Growth Narrative In FY 2026](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286078244.md) - [Assessing UACJ (TSE:5741) Valuation After Earnings Beat And Higher Year End Dividend](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286662798.md)