Nomura posts record full-year profit on Japan market rebound

Nomura posts record full-year profit on Japan market rebound


Net income rose 2.7% from a year earlier to 73.9 billion yen in the three months ended March 31

Published Fri, Apr 24, 2026 · 04:12 PM

[TOKYO] Nomura Holdings cemented a second straight year of record profit, fuelLed by Japan’s financial-market recovery, even after fourth-quarter results missed analysts’ expectations. 

Net income rose 2.7 per cent from a year earlier to 73.9 billion yen (S$591 million) in the three months ended March 31, the Tokyo-based company said Friday. That missed the 98.9 billion yen average of four analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg News. Full-year profit hit an all-time high of 362.1 billion yen.

Japan’s biggest brokerage has been benefiting from volatile global markets and a boom in investing and dealmaking at home. The coming quarters may provide a test for chief executive officer Kentaro Okuda as the Middle East conflict puts a strain on the global economy, while signs of stress in the US$1.8 trillion private credit market cloud his push into alternative assets.

Nomura’s chief financial officer Hiroyuki Moriuchi said that the firm became more conservative in its US macro trading business in the fourth quarter due to the Middle East situation. He said that the economy and financial businesses would be hit if the conflict gets protracted. Already, some deals have been delayed, though there are plenty of M&A and equity capital market deals in the pipeline, Moriuchi said.

The results last quarter were marred by a 2.9 billion yen loss related to “economic hedging” transactions, along with a 6 billion yen loss in equity in earnings of affiliates. 

Nomura’s European operations posted a 13.8 billion yen pretax loss, widening from a loss the previous quarter when its operations there were hit partly because of a setback in the digital-asset market.

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Markets in Japan have seen a turnaround in recent years as inflation returns and companies take steps to boost value for shareholders. Mergers and acquisitions in the country hit a record high last quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and the Nikkei 225 Stock Average is trading at a record after recouping losses since the Iran war began.

Revenue from stock trading rose 26 per cent, climbing for a 12th straight quarter, as it joined Wall Street firms that also posted double-digit gains. Fixed-income revenue rose 18 per cent, the first increase in five quarters. 

Investment-banking revenue increased 6 per cent, extending its growth to a 12th quarter, led by equity underwriting. Wealth management revenue jumped 33 per cent.  

SEE ALSO

Nomura's chief executive officer Kentaro Okuda is seeking to extend the momentum that led to a record profit in 2025.

Nomura’s operations outside Japan earned 2.9 billion yen before taxes, marking the 11th straight quarter of profit.

Shares of Nomura closed down 1.5 per cent before the results were announced. The stock is up less than 1 per cent this year, trailing the Nikkei’s 19 per cent advance. 

Nomura’s return on equity reached 10.1 per cent for the year, exceeding its target of 8 per cent-10 per cent or more. BLOOMBERG

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Liam Redmond

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