Based on the excerpt you provided, the press release states only the raw results for the quarter—a net income of $62 million (or $1.25 per diluted share) and a brief definition of “adjusted net income.” The article does not include any reference to analysts’ forecasts, consensus estimates, or market expectations for the quarter’s earnings.
Because the consensus figure is not disclosed in the material you shared, we cannot determine from this information alone whether the $62 million net income met, exceeded, or fell short of market expectations. To answer that question you would need one of the following pieces of data:
Needed Information | Where It Is Typically Found |
---|---|
Analysts’ consensus EPS or net‑income forecast for Q2 2025 (often expressed as $ per share) | Pre‑earnings research reports, financial news wires (e.g., Bloomberg, Reuters), earnings preview articles, or consensus tables on investment‑research platforms |
Management’s guidance that references the consensus (e.g., “we’re in line with expectations”) | The same press release (later paragraphs), earnings call transcript, or accompanying investor presentation |
Post‑release market reaction (stock price move, commentary from analysts) | Real‑time market data, post‑earnings analyst notes, or news coverage the day after the release |
What you can do next
Check a consensus‑estimate source – Services such as FactSet, Thomson Reuters, Bloomberg, or Yahoo Finance maintain consensus EPS numbers. Look up the Q2 2025 consensus for International Seaways (ticker INSW) and compare it to the reported $1.25 EPS (or $62 M net income).
Read the full earnings release – The snippet you have may be truncated. The complete release often includes a line like “Results were in line with consensus estimates of $X per share,” which would directly answer the question.
Listen to the earnings call – Management typically addresses whether results beat, met, or missed expectations and may provide commentary on why.
Monitor analyst commentary – After the release, analysts publish quick takes (e.g., “INSW beats consensus EPS of $1.10”) that clarify the market’s view.
Bottom line: With only the net‑income figure and no consensus benchmark provided in the excerpt, we cannot definitively say whether the $62 million result met or missed market expectations. Additional data on the consensus estimate is required for a conclusive answer.