Matson, Inc. (MATX) had a good Thursday. The shipping and logistics company's stock climbed after management announced preliminary fourth-quarter results that beat their own expectations and offered an upbeat view of what 2026 might bring.
The timing didn't hurt either. Broader markets were having a decent day, with the S&P 500 up 0.36% and the Nasdaq gaining 0.82%, creating a supportive backdrop for the shipping sector.
Q4 Results Beat Expectations, 2026 Outlook Holds Steady
Here's what Matson is looking at for the fourth quarter: consolidated operating income between $135 million and $145 million. Net income should fall somewhere between $131.3 million and $146.3 million, translating to diluted earnings per share of $4.22 to $4.70. That includes a nice little bump of about $0.77 per share from positive income tax adjustments.
The more interesting piece is the 2026 guidance. Management expects full-year consolidated operating income will approach what they achieved in 2025. That's a solid projection given the headwinds facing global shipping, and it's being driven by two key factors: strong U.S. consumer demand and what the company describes as a stable trading environment in the Transpacific tradelane.
Fourth-quarter volume trends painted a mixed picture across Matson's different markets. FEU volumes ticked up 0.6% in Hawaii and jumped 11.6% in other tradelanes. Guam saw a 4.4% increase. On the flip side, Alaska volumes dropped 3.3% and China fell 7.2%.
CEO Matt Cox explained what drove the quarter's outperformance: "Matson had a solid finish to the year with consolidated fourth quarter results that exceeded our expectations. During the quarter, our China service saw higher than expected freight rates and volume driven by strong e-commerce and e-goods demand. Our China service benefited from strong freight demand in our key customer segments as well as a more stable trading environment in the Transpacific tradelane as a result of the U.S.-China trade and economic deal announced on October 30, 2025, which reduced uncertainty regarding tariffs, port entry fees, global trade and other geopolitical factors."
What Analysts Are Thinking
The next official earnings report drops on February 24, 2026, and analysts are expecting some year-over-year declines. Consensus EPS estimate sits at $2.60, down from $3.80 the prior year. Revenue estimates are calling for $799.80 million, compared to $890.30 million last year.
Despite those projected declines, the stock trades at a P/E ratio of 10.1x, which suggests there might be value here. Analysts seem to think so too. The consensus rating is Buy with an average price target of $125.89.
Recent analyst actions tell the story:
- Wolfe Research upgraded to Outperform with a $142.00 target on November 7, 2025
- Stephens & Co. maintains Overweight and raised their target to $180.00 on November 5, 2025
- Jefferies holds at Hold with a $115.00 target as of August 1, 2025
Here's the interesting tension: the stock trades at what looks like a value multiple, yet earnings are expected to drop 32% year-over-year. The fact that analysts are maintaining Buy ratings suggests they view the current weakness as temporary and believe the valuation justifies the current price.




