Abstract
PBF Energy Inc will report quarterly results on February 12, 2026 Pre-Market, with investor attention centered on margin normalization and a projected year-over-year revenue decline.
Market Forecast
Market consensus points to softer top-line momentum and earnings pressure this quarter as PBF Energy Inc’s revenue is projected at $7.15 billion, down 3.80% year over year, with forecast gross profit margin and net profit margin likely subdued and adjusted EPS estimated at -$1.16. The company’s core refining operations remain the main revenue driver amid volatile crack spreads, while logistics is a relatively small yet stable contributor; refining throughput outlook hinges on turnaround timing, feedstock costs, and gasoline/diesel demand trends. The most promising segment for operational improvement is the refinery logistics and optimization arm at $0.10 billion revenue last quarter; while small in size, efficiency gains and integration can lift margins on a year-over-year basis.
Last Quarter Review
PBF Energy Inc reported last quarter revenue of $7.65 billion, a gross profit margin of 2.78%, GAAP net profit attributable to the parent company of $0.17 billion with a net profit margin of 2.22%, and adjusted EPS of -$0.52, with revenue down 8.72% year over year. A notable highlight was a dramatic quarter-on-quarter rebound in net profit, up 3,371.15%, reflecting crack spread recovery and cost control after prior maintenance headwinds. Main business highlights: refining generated $7.64 billion and logistics delivered $0.10 billion in revenue last quarter, while corporate and other offsets were -$0.09 billion; refining remained the predominant revenue source despite year-over-year weakness.
Current Quarter Outlook (with major analytical insights)
Core Refining Operations
Refining remains the core revenue and cash flow engine, and near‑term performance will be influenced by benchmark 3‑2‑1 crack spreads, regional gasoline/diesel inventories, and planned maintenance turnarounds. With consensus revenue at $7.15 billion and forecast adjusted EPS of -$1.16, the setup implies margin compression versus the seasonal average, consistent with a projected subdued gross margin and a negative EBIT estimate of $0.12 billion. Feedstock differentials, including medium and heavy sour discounts versus light sweet crude, can provide upside if availability widens, while narrower differentials would constrain capture rates. The quarterly net profit margin is likely to sit below mid-cycle as utilization may be tempered by turnaround activity and seasonal shoulder‑period demand. Management’s throughput discipline and product slate optimization should help mitigate volatility, but investors will focus on realized refining margins relative to spot cracks and any commentary on post-turnaround run-rates into spring.
Logistics and Integration
The logistics segment, while contributing a smaller revenue base of $0.10 billion last quarter, offers steady fee-based earnings and supports refinery reliability and crude optionality. Efficiency initiatives around rail, pipeline, and storage utilization can enhance capture rates by reducing bottlenecks and demurrage, which is incremental in a tight-margin environment. Integration benefits between logistics and refining—such as scheduling flexibility and blending—can provide low-capex margin uplift and improve working capital turnover. Investors will watch whether the company can scale these advantages to offset some pressure from weaker refining margins; incremental gains here could be a quiet positive surprise relative to consensus.
Stock Price Drivers This Quarter
The primary stock drivers into the print will be realized refining margins vs. benchmark cracks, the scale and duration of planned turnarounds, and management’s commentary on spring gasoline demand and diesel recovery trends. Balance sheet signals—free cash flow conversion from working capital, incremental buybacks or variable dividends—could shift sentiment if margins track above internal plans. Crack spread volatility remains a risk to both the top line and EPS, but operational execution, including utilization rates and energy cost management, can cushion downside scenarios. Any update on capital allocation priorities and potential growth projects will also shape how investors frame normalized earnings power into the second half.
Analyst Opinions
Most institutional commentary over the recent period skews cautious, emphasizing softer year-over-year revenue and negative earnings estimates for the current quarter. The prevailing view expects margin normalization from peak 2023–2024 levels, with attention on crack spread trends and turnaround cadence that could weigh on both EBIT (forecast at -$0.12 billion) and adjusted EPS (-$1.16). Analysts highlight that while the logistics segment provides stability, it is unlikely to offset refining cyclicality this quarter; upside hinges on better-than-expected capture rates and a quicker rebound in gasoline spreads into spring. Overall, the majority perspective suggests a conservative stance into results, with risk-reward improving only if PBF Energy Inc demonstrates tighter cost control, consistent utilization in the back half of the quarter, and clearer visibility on product demand tailwinds.
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