Takumi Kitamura
Management
Good evening. This is Takumi Kitamura, CFO of Nomura Holdings. I will now give you an overview of our financial results for the first quarter of the fiscal year ending March 2025. Please turn to Page 2. Group-wide net revenue came in at ¥454.4 billion, up 2% over last quarter. Pre-tax income grew 12% to ¥102.9 billion, while net income was ¥68.9 billion, an increase of 21% compared to last quarter. As you can see on the upper right, our earnings momentum has continued for 5 consecutive quarters. EPS was ¥22.36 and annualized ROE 8.1%. These results make a good start in our journey toward achieving our 2030 numerical target to consistently achieve ROE of 8% to 10% or more, as announced at our Investor Day in May. As shown on the bottom right, three segment income before income taxes increased 12% to ¥86.6 billion. Wealth Management and investment management saw client assets continued to grow on the back of inflows, while stable recurring revenue and business revenue reached all-time highs. We are making steady progress in expanding our stable businesses, as announced at our Investor Day. While Wholesale income before income taxes is up slightly, quarter-on-quarter, we further diversified our revenue sources, as Spread Products such as Securitized Products and Credit had a strong quarter, and equities remained robust. Next let's look at the performance of each business, starting with Wealth Management on Page 5. All percentages quoted from now on referred to quarter-on-quarter comparisons. Wealth Management first quarter net revenue increased 5% to ¥114 billion and income before income taxes gained 9% to ¥42.3 billion, representing the highest levels in 9 years since fiscal year 2015-2016 first quarter. Thanks to our large-scale reorganization last spring and the further deepening of our segment-based approach, we were able to deliver results as the mindset of our clients undergo a major shift from savings to investment. In contrast to the relentless rally in Nikkei last quarter, the market remained range bound throughout this quarter. Yet, we were able to deliver higher revenues compared to the strong prior quarter in each segment by offering services aligned to client needs. We made progress in our asset management recurring revenue businesses with recurring revenue at record high of ¥45.8 billion. As we grow revenues, we kept expenses down, particularly non-personnel expenses, resulting in a higher recurring revenue cost coverage ratio of 64%. Please turn to Page 6 for an update on total sales by product. Sales of stocks were strong at ¥4.8 trillion, including ¥1 trillion from a tender offer. That excluded sales of secondary stocks slowed. Total sales increased 9% to ¥6.8 billion. Sales of investment trusts were up 27% and discretionary investment contracts grew by 16%. Sales of insurance products increased by 38%. This underscores sound strong growth in sales of products and services, where proposals and advice from sales partners leads to transactions. KPI on Page 7 are trending smoothly. As shown on the top left, net inflows of recurring revenue assets were ¥387.9 billion, representing a solid start towards achieving our annual target of ¥800 billion. Recurring revenue assets shown on the right were at a record high of ¥24.3 trillion. The number of workplace services provided, shown on the bottom right, was ¥3.73 million, an extra ¥100,000 compared to the end of March. With the heightened focus on human capital management, we are seeing results from our efforts such as designing and proposing schemes for companies based on their objective and scope, supporting information sessions for employees and elaborating with investment banking. Please turn to Page 8 for an overview of investment management. Net revenue increased 9% to ¥47.7 billion and income before income taxes was up 31% at ¥23.2 billion. As shown on the bottom left, stable business revenue was ¥39.1 billion, a record quarterly high since the division was established. The Asset management business had another strong quarter with net inflows lifting assets under management to a record high, driving steady growth in management fees. Investment gains/loss booked at 54% gain to ¥8.6 billion, primarily driven by private equity firm, Nomura Capital Partners. Please turn to Page 9 for an overview of the asset management business, which generates business revenue. The top left shows June-end assets under management of ¥92.5 trillion, representing the sixth straight quarter record high, and outstripping our March 2025 KPI of ¥89 trillion. Quarterly net inflows shown on the bottom left were ¥950 billion, of which ¥700 billion flowed into the investment trust business and ¥260 billion into the investment advisory and international businesses. In the investment trust business, ¥410 billion flowed into investment trusts through a diverse range of distribution channels, including Nomura Securities, regional financial institutions and other securities firms. Balanced funds, global stock funds and private assets all reported inflows. DC funds also continued to grow with net assets under management surpassing ¥3 trillion. International was the main driver of the investment advisory and international businesses this quarter with inflows into U.S. high-yield bonds and global stock funds. As you can see on the bottom right, we continue to build out our private asset business with an alternative AUM topping ¥2 trillion for the first time. That's an increase of ¥270 billion from the end of March, nearly half of which came from net inflows. Please turn to Page 10 for Wholesale. Wholesale net revenue slipped 4% to ¥244.8 billion. As shown on the bottom left, global markets increased 2%, while investment banking dropped 25% from the strong prior quarter. Wholesale expenses declined 4% as last quarter's ¥14 billion loss provision and year-end factors were no longer present this quarter, more than offsetting an increase in commissions and floor brokerage linked to trading volumes and severance-related expenses due to realigning headcount. As a result, income before income taxes increased 3% to ¥21.1 billion. Please turn to Page 11 for an update on business line performance. First, Global Markets net revenue increased 2% to ¥207.7 billion. Fixed income net revenue was up 3%, at ¥125.6 billion. Macro products was roughly flat as market participants remained on the sidelines on uncertainty over the rate cut in the U.S. Spread Products reported significantly higher revenues in securitized products in Americas, driven by an increase in new originations and secondary trading, and a strong performance in Japan credit on demand for high-yield bonds. Equities net revenue trended in line with last quarter at ¥82 billion. Equity products booked higher revenues in Americas and EMEA, while Japan and AEJ slowed from the strong prior quarter. Execution services booked strong revenues in Japan for fourth straight quarter and higher revenues in both the Americas and EMEA. Please turn to Page 12 for investment banking. Net revenue slowed 25% from the particularly strong previous quarter to ¥37.2 billion. Japan performance remained robust with advisory revenues at the highest quarterly level since the year ended March 2017 when comparisons are possible. International slowed from the strong prior quarter as execution of transactions dropped off this quarter. In advisory, Japan revenues increased on contributions from completed M&A transactions, and we continue to respond to diverse client needs, such as de-listings, business reorganizations and cross-border deals. International advisory revenues declined from strong last quarter, but dialogue with clients remains robust, and we expect this to result in revenues in the latter half of the year. Financing and solutions reported lower revenues in Japan as seasonal factors led to a dip in transactions, while ALF slowed from strong prior quarter. Please turn to Page 13 for an overview of non-interest expenses. Group-wide expenses were roughly flat at ¥351.5 billion. Compensation and benefits increased 4% to ¥184.5 billion, due mainly to yen depreciation, but also impacted by an increase in fixed pay and severance-related expenses. Other expenses dropped 25% to ¥43.4 billion compared to last quarter, which included a loss provision of ¥14 billion. Please turn to Page 14 for an update of our financial position. The table on the bottom left shows Tier 1 capital of ¥3.5 trillion, up by about ¥70 billion from the end of March. Risk-weighted assets increased ¥1.3 trillion to ¥20 trillion. This resulted in a Tier 1 capital ratio of 17.4% and a CET1 capital ratio of 15.6% at the end of June. The waterfall chart on the bottom right shows changes to risk-weighted assets with credit risk up ¥0.4 trillion due mainly to yen depreciation, and market risk up ¥0.9 trillion due also to lower yen as well as expansion in our financing business. That concludes the overview of our first quarter results. To sum up, this was our fifth consecutive quarter of earnings momentum, and we have embarked on a smooth start towards achieving our 2030 numerical target of consistently achieving ROE of 8% to 10% or more. Momentum in Japan around the shift from savings to investment is growing, and we are seeing growing demand for comprehensive asset management services. Wealth Management is seeing results from its reorganization last spring and its segment-based approach, while investment management is delivering steady growth in its asset management business, as it diversifies its distribution channels and continues to book net inflows. While Wholesale performance still has room for improvement, all business lines reported higher revenues compared to the same quarter last year. And we are making progress in diversifying and stabilizing our revenues, as discussed at Investor Day. Since hitting a record high in July, the Nikkei average has recently undergone a significant correction as investors turned cautious over yen strengthening and U.S. tech stocks declined. That said, Wealth Management continues to see a lot of dialogue with clients and new accounts opened by high-net-worth clients. Offerings and other primary transactions contributed to revenues in July, outstripping the strong performance in the first quarter. In Wholesale, Global Markets is seeing strong performance in macro products, credit and execution services. Investment banking is supporting a wide range of transactions such as large offerings and unwinding of cross-shareholdings by Japanese corporates as well as advisory and sustainability-related transactions internationally. As a result, Wholesale revenues in July are trending substantially higher than first quarter revenues. Traditionally, this period is a slow season as market participants take a break for the summer, but we expect to see volatility in the market over the U.S. presidential election in the autumn and monetary policy by central banks around the world. We will manage risk and costs appropriately while monetizing business opportunities. We look forward to your continued support. Thank you.