Analysis Period: Nine Months Ended December 31, 2024 vs. Nine Months Ended December 31, 2025
For the seasoned investor watching the horizon, Mitsubishi HC Capital (MHC) has just posted a striking set of figures for the first nine months of the fiscal year ending March 31, 2026. Net income attributable to owners jumped a staggering 55.1% year-on-year, reaching ¥134.9 billion. While the headline numbers suggest a gold rush, a closer look at the "trail map" reveals that this performance is a blend of genuine operational momentum, strategic asset disposals, and a significant accounting "windfall" from aligning the fiscal calendars of its international subsidiaries.
The most prominent shift in MHC’s recent landscape isn't just what they are earning, but how they are accounting for it. The company has moved toward a more unified global structure, which has created some "artificial" but significant bumps in the road.
While the profits are swinging wildly due to accounting and asset sales, the core "machinery" of MHC remains remarkably consistent.
At first glance, hitting 84.4% of the full-year profit forecast in just nine months looks like a reason to celebrate. However, management’s refusal to raise the full-year forecast is the most "honest" part of this report. They are essentially admitting that the second half of the year will be quieter, weighed down by "business restructuring expenses" in the Global Customer Business.
The Bottom Line: Mitsubishi HC Capital is a company in the middle of a massive "spring cleaning." They are aligning their global books, selling off old buildings to harvest gains, and cleaning up their American credit act. The 55% profit jump is an accounting mirage in part, but the underlying trend of 20%+ growth in most core segments (Customer Finance, Logistics, Aviation) is real.
Monitor the Aviation impairments and the Environment segment losses—if those don't start to stabilize, the current profit high might be a hard one to maintain once the "fiscal period adjustment" dust settles.