- John Wiley & Sons (NYSE: WLY) surpassed analyst expectations for its quarterly earnings per share (EPS), reporting $1.67 per share against an estimate of $1.65.
- Despite the EPS beat, the company’s quarterly revenue of $447.94 million fell slightly short of the $450.00 million forecast, primarily due to market softness in its Learning segment.
- For the full fiscal year 2026, Wiley demonstrated robust financial performance with operating income growth of 25% to $277.00 million and a significant increase in Diluted Earnings Per Share (EPS) to $4.16, alongside a healthy debt-to-equity ratio of 0.30.
John Wiley & Sons (NYSE: WLY), known as Wiley, is a global company specializing in academic publishing and instructional materials. It operates through key divisions like Research and Learning. Before its recent announcement, as highlighted by Benzinga, Wall Street analysts anticipated the company would report specific quarterly earnings and revenue figures.
On June 16, 2026, Wiley announced quarterly earnings of $1.67 per share. This figure successfully beat the analyst consensus estimate of $1.65. The positive earnings news helped its shares gain 2% in after-hours trading, rising to a price of $44.20.
However, the company’s quarterly revenue did not meet expectations. Wiley reported revenue of $447.94 million, which was just below the analyst consensus estimate of $450.00 million. The company notes that this was due to market-related softness in its Learning segment, which offset growth in its Research division.
Looking at the full fiscal year 2026, Wiley shows a stronger performance. As reported by Businesswire, while its GAAP revenue was flat at $1.68 billion, operating income grew 25% to $277.00 million. Diluted Earnings Per Share (EPS), which represents the profit allocated to each share, increased significantly to $4.16.
From a financial health perspective, Wiley has a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 10.23. Its debt-to-equity ratio is 0.30, indicating low reliance on debt. The company’s current ratio, a measure of its ability to pay short-term bills, is 0.54, which suggests it has less cash and assets than immediate liabilities.
