Interactive Brokers heads into Tuesday’s earnings report with its stock near record highs — and a valuation that’s making some analysts uncomfortable.
Interactive Brokers Group, Inc., IBKR
The electronic broker is expected to post EPS of $0.60 and revenue of $1.68 billion when it reports after the bell. That would represent year-over-year revenue growth of 17.5%, though EPS would dip slightly from $0.65 in Q4.
IBKR has beaten both EPS and revenue estimates in 75% of its last eight quarters. Last quarter, EPS came in at $0.65 versus a $0.59 forecast — a 10.2% beat — while revenue of $1.64 billion topped the $1.61 billion estimate.
The stock has climbed more than 110% over the past year, and currently trades at $81.25 — above where most analysts think it should be.
The mean analyst price target sits at $78.30, implying negative upside from current levels. Jefferies recently cut its target from $91 to $81. BMO Capital trimmed its target from $90 to $80. Both still carry Buy ratings, but the direction of revisions tells a story.
At 36.8 times trailing earnings, IBKR is priced for perfection. The GF Score of 84/100 reflects strong fundamentals, with a perfect 10/10 profitability rating. But the valuation component is a concern — analysts at GuruFocus flag the stock as overvalued at current prices.
EPS estimates have been flat over the past week and barely moved over 60 days, up just 0.76%. Revenue estimates actually ticked down 0.67% over two months. That kind of stability suggests the market sees this as a steady business, not a high-growth surprise waiting to happen.
One number investors will zero in on: the pretax profit margin. IBKR posted 79% in Q4. Sustaining that level of efficiency is a tall order, and any slippage could unsettle a market that’s already pricing in near-flawless execution.
Key watch items include account growth, client equity levels, trading volume, and management’s commentary on how much of recent earnings strength is structural versus a product of the current rate environment.
In late March, IBKR announced it would allow clients to transfer existing crypto holdings into Interactive Brokers-linked crypto accounts. It’s a product expansion worth watching, though the near-term earnings impact is expected to be minimal.
Insider activity is another flag. Over the past three months, insiders net sold $30.7 million in stock, with only two small buy transactions totaling 100 shares. That imbalance doesn’t necessarily signal trouble, but it’s not a ringing endorsement heading into a high-stakes print.
The company’s current market cap sits at approximately $36.2 billion, and the broader analyst consensus remains Buy.
IBKR last reported Q1 2025 EPS of $1.88 — the anticipated $0.60 reflects a change in how EPS is calculated at the entity level, not a collapse in business performance.
The post Interactive Brokers (IBKR) Stock: What to Expect from Earnings Today appeared first on CoinCentral.


