Borr Drilling Past Earnings Performance

Past criteria checks 3/6

Borr Drilling has been growing earnings at an average annual rate of 31.5%, while the Energy Services industry saw earnings growing at 30.2% annually. Revenues have been growing at an average rate of 25.1% per year. Borr Drilling's return on equity is 7.5%, and it has net margins of 8.1%.

Key information

31.5%

Earnings growth rate

52.8%

EPS growth rate

Energy Services Industry Growth1.7%
Revenue growth rate25.1%
Return on equity7.5%
Net Margin8.1%
Next Earnings Update06 Nov 2024

Recent past performance updates

Recent updates

Revenue & Expenses Breakdown

How Borr Drilling makes and spends money. Based on latest reported earnings, on an LTM basis.


Earnings and Revenue History

LSE:0BDR Revenue, expenses and earnings (USD Millions)
DateRevenueEarningsG+A ExpensesR&D Expenses
30 Jun 2491875580
31 Mar 2483444570
31 Dec 2377222560
30 Sep 23700-28520
30 Jun 23616-83470
31 Mar 23534-249460
31 Dec 22444-293430
30 Sep 22364-318360
30 Jun 22329-295370
31 Mar 22279-190350
31 Dec 21245-193350
30 Sep 21236-206400
30 Jun 21223-235430
31 Mar 21252-285550
31 Dec 20308-318490
30 Sep 20340-319560
30 Jun 20384-336560
31 Mar 20386-330500
31 Dec 19334-298500
30 Sep 19295-348500
30 Jun 19242-308450
31 Mar 19206-212390
31 Dec 18165-190390
30 Sep 18112-142260
30 Jun 1862-112280
31 Mar 1811-117260
31 Dec 170-88180

Quality Earnings: 0BDR has high quality earnings.

Growing Profit Margin: 0BDR became profitable in the past.


Free Cash Flow vs Earnings Analysis


Past Earnings Growth Analysis

Earnings Trend: 0BDR has become profitable over the past 5 years, growing earnings by 31.5% per year.

Accelerating Growth: 0BDR has become profitable in the last year, making the earnings growth rate difficult to compare to its 5-year average.

Earnings vs Industry: 0BDR has become profitable in the last year, making it difficult to compare its past year earnings growth to the Energy Services industry (31.1%).


Return on Equity

High ROE: 0BDR's Return on Equity (7.5%) is considered low.


Return on Assets


Return on Capital Employed


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