Tiger Oil and Energy, Inc. (TGRO) Fundamentals
As of May 23, 2026
TL;DR — Tiger Oil and Energy, Inc. (TGRO) fundamentals as of May 23, 2026
Tiger Oil and Energy, Inc. (TGRO) trades at a trailing P/E of N/A and a P/B of N/A. Return on equity is 378.9%, return on invested capital is 8.3%, and the company carries a debt-to-equity ratio of -0.22. The current ratio sits at 0.01, free cash flow yield is -16.2%, and the dividend yield is 0.0%. FAIL — multiple quality screens fail.
For intrinsic value (DCF, owner earnings, Graham number) and the full 5-pillar score, see the TGRO overview page.
Full Fundamentals Table
Every key indicator we track for TGRO fundamentals, grouped by category. Industry median is shown where a sector classification is available.
| Metric | TGRO | Energy median | What it measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | View full statement | - | Trailing twelve-month total revenue |
| Net Income (TTM) | View full statement | - | Bottom-line profit after taxes and interest |
| Free Cash Flow (TTM) | View full statement | - | Cash from operations minus CapEx |
| EPS (TTM) | N/A | - | Earnings per diluted share |
| ROE | 378.9% | 13% | Return on Equity — net income / shareholder equity |
| ROA | -3345.4% | - | Return on Assets — net income / total assets |
| ROIC | 8.3% | - | Return on Invested Capital — NOPAT / (debt + equity) |
| P/E (Trailing) | N/A | 13x | Price / earnings — how many years of profit to recoup price |
| P/B | N/A | 1.8x | Price / book value — premium over net assets |
| P/S | 574.47x | - | Price / sales — useful when earnings are noisy |
| EV/EBITDA | N/A | - | Enterprise value / EBITDA — capital-structure neutral |
| Debt / Equity | -0.22 | 0.50 | Leverage — lower = less reliance on debt |
| Current Ratio | 0.01 | - | Current assets / current liabilities — short-term liquidity |
| Dividend Yield | 0.0% | - | Annual dividend / current price |
5-Year Trend
Indexed revenue growth path for TGRO over the past five fiscal years (base = 100). Used as a quick sanity check on whether the top line is compounding or stalling.
Trend indexed from 1-year revenue growth rate. Full statement available in the analyst tier.
Industry Comparison
Across Energy, the median company prints P/E around 13x, P/B near 1.8x, ROE close to 13%, and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.5. TGRO's reading on each metric is in the ratio table above — anything materially above the median valuation multiple deserves a thesis to justify the premium, anything materially below the median return-on-capital flags an operational gap.
Compare TGRO side-by-side with sector peers in the Energy stock list.
Quality Triple Check
Piotroski F-Score
Nine-point checklist for accounting quality and operational efficiency
4/9
FLAG
Beneish M-Score
Earnings-manipulation detector — below -2.22 is healthy
N/A
PENDING
Altman Z-Score
Bankruptcy-risk model — above 2.99 is "safe zone"
-124.49
FLAG
Verdict: FAIL — multiple quality screens fail. Treat the fundamentals with caution and read the latest 10-K before acting.
Next steps
- View the full TGRO overview for intrinsic value (DCF), margin of safety, and the 5-pillar VM Score.
- Check the TGRO beta page for volatility vs the S&P 500.
- Look at the TGRO P/E ratio page for the 10-year valuation context.
- Dig into the TGRO debt-to-equity page for leverage trends.
- Run your own model in the DCF calculator.
Frequently asked about TGRO fundamentals
What are the key fundamentals for Tiger Oil and Energy, Inc. (TGRO)?↓
The core TGRO fundamentals are P/E N/A, ROE 378.9%, ROIC 8.3%, debt/equity -0.22, and dividend yield 0.0%. The complete ratio table on this page covers revenue, net income, FCF, EPS, ROA, P/B, P/S, EV/EBITDA, and current ratio.
How does TGRO compare to its Energy peers?↓
The Energy sector median P/E is roughly 13x, ROE 13%, and D/E 0.5. TGRO prints P/E N/A, ROE 378.9%, and D/E -0.22. Use the Industry Comparison row in the ratio table for the full diff.
Does TGRO pass the Quality Triple Check?↓
TGRO passes 0 of 3 quality screens (Piotroski F-Score, Beneish M-Score, Altman Z-Score). Detailed verdict above.
How is "fundamentals" different from intrinsic value?↓
Fundamentals describe what the business looks like today: profit, cash flow, leverage, returns on capital. Intrinsic value uses those fundamentals as inputs to a DCF (or similar model) and discounts the future cash flows back to today. Use both — fundamentals tell you whether a business is healthy, intrinsic value tells you whether the price is fair.
How often does ValueMarkers update TGRO fundamentals?↓
Cached financial statements refresh every 12 hours. The ratio table on this page is rebuilt every 6 hours via Next.js ISR, and the underlying FMP data refreshes on each new earnings release.