
Listed Japan firms log 11% quarterly profit drop
A tally by SMBC Nikko Securities showed that 1,143 firms in the Topix stock price index posted a combined net profit of ¥12,740.2 billion in the fiscal first quarter.
Transportation machinery makers saw a 42.1% decrease in net profit. Nissan Motor and Mazda Motor swung to losses, while Toyota Motor marked a double-digit profit decline.
Electricity and city gas suppliers were also in the red, affected by Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, which booked huge charges related to the decommissioning of nuclear reactors.
Information and telecommunications service operators posted a 72.9% profit increase thanks to SoftBank Group, which had strong performance in its investment operations. Insurance firms reported a 35.8% profit rise.
For the full year ending in March 2026, publicly traded companies are expected to post a 7.5% decrease in net profit, to ¥49,891 billion, the first decline in six years.
Hikaru Yasuda, chief equity strategist at SMBC Nikko, said that attention should be paid to how well companies can absorb tariff impacts by passing on costs to customers or cutting costs.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Japan Times
9 hours ago
- Japan Times
Donki operator plans 250 new stores in tourism bet
Japanese retailer Pan Pacific International Holdings plans to open 250 new stores by 2035, in a bet on continued surging foreign tourism. The Don Don Donki store operator is aiming to drive tax-free visitor sales and expand in locations of key tourist travel routes, according to a earnings presentation Monday. Pan Pacific set its 2035 goal for ¥400 billion ($2.7 billion) in tax-free sales, after a record ¥174.2 billion in tax-free sales for fiscal year 2025, driven by increased store traffic from international customers. The move comes as the government is targeting 60 million annual visitors by 2030, thanks to surging post-pandemic global tourism and a weak yen driving record inbound numbers.


Japan Times
10 hours ago
- Japan Times
Foxconn to operate SoftBank's Stargate AI server site in Ohio
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. will operate a U.S. factory owned by SoftBank Group Corp., setting up what's in the running to be the first manufacturing site in the Japanese company's $500 billion Stargate venture with OpenAI and Oracle Corp. SoftBank is acquiring Hon Hai's electric-vehicle plant in Ohio but the Taiwanese company will continue to run the complex after turning it into an AI server production plant, Hon Hai Chairman Young Liu said, confirming a report. SoftBank will supply manufacturing gear to the factory, and a joint venture between the two companies will make AI data center-related equipment, Liu said. SoftBank is scouting a number of potential data center sites to serve as a flagship for Stargate, weighing their access to water, power and telecom networks. Hon Hai's participation represents a boon for SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son's ambition to be at the center of surging investment in artificial intelligence hardware. Hon Hai — known also as Foxconn — assembles Apple iPhones and Nvidia servers. In January, when U.S. President Donald Trump first unveiled Stargate, Son stood beside him and promised to deploy $100 billion "immediately' into data centers, electricity generation and other infrastructure to support AI. But the Stargate rollout stalled after economic risks stemming from U.S. tariffs and the rise of cheaper AI alternatives such as DeepSeek made it harder to create the pricing models to secure project financing, it was reported in May. SoftBank has denied that financing has been an issue for Stargate.


Japan Times
11 hours ago
- Japan Times
JETRO struggles to expand scallop supply chain in U.S.
The Japan External Trade Organization, or JETRO, struggles to build a new supply chain for Japanese scallops in the United States that involves processing in Mexico, people familiar with the matter said Sunday. Steep tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump left prospects for the project uncertain, apparently making businesses reluctant to invest in it. The United States previously imported Japanese scallops after processing in China, which was their main export destination. But Beijing imposed a ban on imports of Japanese fisheries products in August 2023, when Japan's crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant started releasing into the ocean treated water containing small amounts of tritium. In 2023, Japan's scallop exports dropped 24% from the previous year to ¥68.9 billion. JETRO then planned to build an alternative supply chain using Ensenada, northwestern Mexico, as a new location for scallop processing. In March 2024, officials from 14 Japanese companies, including processors in Hokkaido and Miyagi Prefecture, visited there. The new supply chain in which scallops are processed in Ensenada and exported to the West Coast was set to be established in 2024. But the project has faced a headwind since Trump's return to the White House earlier this year. The U.S. president has imposed high tariffs on imports from Mexico over illegal migrants from the country. In addition, poor catches of scallops amid the global warming have added to the uncertainty. In June this year, China announced it would lift its ban on Japanese fishery products. While this was good news for Japanese fishermen, relying on China as an export destination may be a risk, amid fears of a deterioration in Japan-China relations. "Processing in Mexico is a still option," a JETRO official said.