Dolby Laboratories

Dolby turns an 87.5% gross margin business into a $6 billion stock where revenue slipped 3% last quarter.

If you own Dolby, you own a royalty machine that needs growth to look less sleepy.

dlb

technology mid cap updated jan 9, 2026
$65.15
market cap ~$6B · 52-week range $64–$90
xvary composite: 71 / 100 · average
our overall rating — combines growth, value, risk, and momentum
Start here if you're new
what it is
Dolby gets paid when your movies, TVs, phones, and cars use its audio and imaging tech.
how it gets paid
Last year Dolby Laboratories made $1.3B in revenue. International licensing was the main engine at $0.78B, or 60% of sales.
why it's growing
Revenue grew 5.9% last year. The latest quarter saw revenue slip 3%, though EPS beat the street by 7%.
what just happened
Dolby reported $347M in quarterly revenue, down 3% vs. prior year, but beat non-GAAP EPS estimates by 7%.
At a glance
A balance sheet — strong enough to weather a downturn
70/100 earnings predictability — reasonably predictable
24.9x trailing p/e — priced about right
2.2% dividend yield — cash in your pocket every quarter
13.5% return on capital — nothing to write home about
xvary composite: 71/100 — average
What they do
Dolby gets paid when your movies, TVs, phones, and cars use its audio and imaging tech.
Dolby wins because you do not buy a codec, you buy the device or movie that already has it baked in. Licensing (collecting royalties on intellectual property) → tiny delivery cost for each extra sale → so what: Dolby kept an 87.5% gross margin in the latest quarter. Once your TV, phone, or theater is built around Dolby standards, switching is a headache for the manufacturer and invisible to you, which is exactly why the royalty stream sticks.
technology mid-cap licensing media-tech ar-vr
How they make money
$1.3B annual revenue · their business grew +5.9% last year
International licensing
$0.78B
U.S. licensing
$0.42B
International products & services
$0.07B
U.S. products & services
$0.04B
The products that matter
licenses audio and video standards
Licensing
$1.3B revenue base · 28.4% net margin
this is the core story. against a $1.3B revenue base, Dolby kept 28.4% as profit. that is why the business can look slow and still be worth watching.
core engine
sells cinema hardware and systems
Cinema Hardware
under pressure in fiscal 2025
management said product sales faced pressure in fiscal 2025. in a company that did $1.349B in revenue, that matters less than licensing — but it still tells you where the weak spot is.
legacy exposure
developer tools and software platform
Dolby.io & Software
early-stage against a $1.349B company
this is the optionality bucket. the snapshot gives no disclosed revenue here, which tells you the same thing another way: against a $1.349B business, it is still too small to drive the headline numbers.
future bet
Key numbers
87.5%
gross margin
Gross margin → money left after direct costs → so what: Dolby sells ideas, not factories, and the economics look like it.
28.0%
operating margin
Operating margin → profit after running the business → so what: even after paying people and overhead, Dolby keeps 28 cents per dollar.
65%
international sales
Most of Dolby's revenue comes from outside the U.S., which expands reach but also imports global demand risk into your thesis.
24.9x
trailing p/e
Trailing P/E → stock price divided by last year's earnings → so what: you are paying a premium multiple for a business that just posted lackluster 2025 results.
Financial health
A
strength
  • balance sheet grade A — very strong financial position
  • risk rank 2 — safer than 80% of stocks
  • price stability 85 / 100
  • net profit margin 30.0% — keeps 30 cents of every dollar in revenue
  • return on equity 14% — $0.14 profit for every $1 investors have put in
A with balance sheet grade and risk rank standing out. your money faces less risk here than at most public companies.
Total return vs. market

You invested $10,000 in DLB 3 years ago → it's now worth $9,700.

The index would have given you $13,920.

source: institutional data · total return
What just happened
beat estimates
Dolby reported $347M in quarterly revenue, down 3% vs. prior year, but beat non-GAAP EPS estimates by 7%.
Non-GAAP EPS was $1.06 versus a $0.99 consensus estimate, while gross margin stayed very high at 87.5%. Management raised full-year guidance on the back of this beat.
$347M
revenue
$1.06
eps (non-gaap)
87.5%
gross margin
the number that mattered
Revenue slipping 3% matters most because a premium-margin royalty business needs the top line growing to justify its valuation.
source: company earnings report, 2026

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What could go wrong

the #1 risk is licensing growth slowing while newer software bets stay too small to matter.

med
the royalty engine loses momentum
Dolby's strength is that a $1.3B revenue base produced a 28.4% net margin. if adoption of Atmos, Vision, and related patents slows, the premium economics matter less because the whole licensing story gets flatter.
impact: pressure on the core revenue base and on the 24.9x trailing earnings multiple investors still pay for that durability.
med
product sales stay weak for longer
management already flagged product sales pressure in fiscal 2025. this is not the main thesis, but it is the part of the business most exposed to cyclical hardware spending and slower cinema upgrades.
impact: a weaker mix inside the $1.349B revenue base makes the company look even more dependent on licensing to carry the year.
med
the software optionality stays optional
Dolby.io sounds like a next chapter. the snapshot gives no disclosed revenue for it. that means you should assume the 2026 outlook still rests on the core business, not on a new engine suddenly showing up.
impact: if fiscal 2026 lands below the $1.39B low end of guidance, the market will have fewer reasons to give the stock the benefit of the doubt.
a forced rethink here probably does not come from balance-sheet stress. it comes from a simple question: if growth slips below the guided 3%–7% range, why should DLB keep a mid-20s earnings multiple.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
earnings
next earnings report
the estimated date is thursday, april 30, 2026. the key question is whether revenue still tracks toward the $1.39B–$1.44B guide.
metric
full-year revenue pacing
management guided to 3%–7% growth. if quarterly prints start leaning below that band, the stock's "steady compounder" label gets harder to defend.
trend
Atmos, Vision, and software adoption
the long-term case is more formats, more devices, and more use cases carrying Dolby technology. this is where future upside has to come from.
risk
whether product weakness spreads
product sales were already under pressure in fiscal 2025. if that weakness deepens, the market will focus even more on whether licensing alone can do enough.
Analyst rankings
short-term outlook
average
momentum score 3 — in human-speak, analysts do not see a strong short-term edge either way.
risk profile
above average
stability score 2 — safer than roughly 80% of stocks, mostly because the balance sheet is strong and the business is profitable.
chart momentum
average
technical score 3 — the chart is behaving like the market, not like a stock in escape velocity.
earnings predictability
70 / 100
the earnings stream is decent, not pristine. you should expect some variability rather than utility-stock consistency.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity

institutions have been net buying for 3 consecutive quarters — 198 buyers vs. 182 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 57.0M shares. net buying for 3 quarters.

source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$54 $99
$65 current price
$77 target midpoint · +18% from current · 3-5yr high: $120 (+85% · 18% ann'l return)
source: institutional data · analyst targets

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