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EFTY

Etoiles Capital Group Co., Ltd. Class A Ordinary Shares

NASDAQ: EFTY · INDUSTRIALS · CONSULTING SERVICES

$15.02
+0.00% today

Updated 2026-06-02

Market cap
$302.05M
P/E ratio
187.75
P/S ratio
93.74x
EPS (TTM)
$0.08
Dividend yield
52W range
$4 – $18
Volume
0.8M

Etoiles Capital Group Co., Ltd. Class A Ordinary Shares (EFTY) Financial statements

SEC filings — annual and quarterly data.

Income statement — annual

Item202320242025
Revenue$63863.00$2.53M$3.22M
Revenue growth (YoY)+3855.2%+27.6%
Cost of revenue$12773.00$534880.00$997475.00
Gross profit$51090.00$1.99M$2.22M
Gross margin80.0%78.8%69.0%
R&D
SG&A$15663.00$859935.00$2.26M
Operating income$35427.00$1.00M$-31908.00
Operating margin55.5%39.6%-1.0%
EBITDA$35427.00$1.08M
EBITDA margin55.5%42.6%0.0%
EBIT$1.00M
Interest expense$0.00$3770.00$50516.00
Income tax
Effective tax rate0.0%0.0%0.0%
Net income$32696.00$852499.00$-153660.00
Net income growth (YoY)+2507.3%-118.0%
Profit margin51.2%33.8%-4.8%

Frequently asked questions

What is Etoiles Capital Group Co., Ltd. Class A Ordinary Shares's revenue?

Etoiles Capital Group Co., Ltd. Class A Ordinary Shares's trailing twelve-month revenue is $3.22M. Revenue is the top line the whole model builds on, and at this scale the question shifts from how fast it grows to whether margins hold as it compounds.

How profitable is EFTY?

In its most recent fiscal year, EFTY ran a gross margin of 69.05%, an operating margin of -0.99%, and a net margin of -4.77%. Margins this high mean most of each extra dollar of revenue drops through to profit, which is the signature of real pricing power.

How much free cash flow does EFTY generate?

EFTY produced $-1.60M in free cash flow in its most recent fiscal year. Free cash flow is what is left after running and reinvesting in the business, and it is the cash that actually funds buybacks, dividends, and a stronger balance sheet.

Is EFTY's balance sheet healthy?

EFTY holds $5.43M in cash and equivalents against — in long-term debt, on $5.80M of shareholder equity. That debt is best read against the cash flow the business throws off each year.