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Ruslan Averin
Ruslan Averin

Posted on • Originally published at averin.com

Itochu Corporation (TSE: 8001): The Most Defensive Sogo Shosha — And Why the Premium Is Earned

12 consecutive years of dividend increases. 18% ROE. Berkshire's 9% stake. At 12x earnings, is Itochu expensive or still the best risk-adjusted entry in Japanese equities?


Of the five Japanese trading companies that Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway owns, Itochu Corporation is the one that analysts debate most. It's the most expensive: trading at approximately 12x forward earnings, it carries a 25-35% valuation premium over Mitsui (9x), Mitsubishi (10x), and Marubeni (8.8x).

That premium exists for reasons. Whether those reasons justify the multiple in May 2026 — especially after a 15% Nikkei correction — is the question this analysis attempts to answer.

Short answer: yes.


Why Itochu Is Different From the Others

The sogo shosha model was built on commodity intermediation: connecting Japanese manufacturers to global raw materials. Most of Japan's Big Five still derive 50-65% of their profits from commodities. Itochu made a deliberate turn two decades ago.

Today, roughly 40% of Itochu's operating profit comes from three non-commodity divisions: food, apparel, and financial services.

Food spans upstream grain origination from North America and Australia through processing and retail distribution across Japan and Southeast Asia — ¥5.8 trillion in segment revenue in FY2025.

Apparel includes the Descente brand and distribution rights for international labels in Japan, China, and Korea — stable consumer-facing income with pricing power.

Financial services includes insurance businesses and a stake in Pacific Life Holdings — cash flows that are structurally uncorrelated with commodity cycles.

The practical implication: when LNG prices fell and nickel markets were disrupted in 2024-2025, Itochu's earnings held up while Mitsui and Sumitomo saw compression. That stability is priced in — and for good reason.


FY2025: Consistent When Others Were Volatile

Itochu's net profit reached ¥960 billion ($6.4B) in FY2025 — 3% below the FY2024 headline, but FY2024 included a significant one-time divestiture gain. Exclude that, and operating profit grew approximately 7% year-over-year.

The dividend was raised to ¥220 from ¥200, marking 12 consecutive years of dividend increases — a record of consistency unmatched among the Big Five sogo shosha.

Return on equity: 18%. This has been stable above 15% for four consecutive years. That consistency — not a single peak year — is what the premium multiple is buying.


Three Arguments for Buying at 12x

Earnings stability through commodity cycles is genuinely rare. In a macro environment defined by US tariff uncertainty, BOJ rate hikes, and China property sector stress, Itochu's consumer and financial businesses generate income regardless of where copper, LNG, or iron ore trades. That predictability carries scarcity premium for institutional investors running risk-constrained portfolios.

The CITIC stake is underappreciated China optionality. Itochu holds a significant stake in CITIC, China's largest state-backed conglomerate. In FY2025, this contributed approximately ¥180 billion to equity earnings. For investors who believe Chinese domestic stimulus will eventually stabilize consumer spending, Itochu's CITIC exposure is a call option on Chinese recovery that most Western investors cannot access through other listed vehicles.

Capital return program is aggressive for its valuation level. ¥200 billion in buybacks authorized for FY2026 — approximately 3% of current market cap. At 12x earnings, these buybacks are mechanically accretive. Combined with the 12-year progressive dividend, Itochu is returning well above 6% of market cap annually through capital returns alone.


One Genuine Risk and One Technical Risk

China concentration. The CITIC stake and Itochu's China retail and apparel exposure mean that deterioration in Chinese consumer sentiment would reduce equity earnings meaningfully. Analysts model that a 30% decline in China-related earnings reduces total net profit by 6-8%. That's manageable — but not remote given ongoing property sector stress.

The premium leaves less margin of safety. This is the honest caveat at 12x. If Itochu misses earnings estimates by even 10%, the rerating risk is proportionally larger than for a stock starting at 9x. Defensive premiums protect in downturns; they're costly in strong commodity recoveries where Mitsui and Mitsubishi will outperform.


Is 12x Expensive?

In absolute terms: no. Compare Itochu to the S&P 500 at ~22x forward earnings, or to global food distribution companies at 18-22x. The earnings yield at 12x is approximately 8.3% against Japan's risk-free rate of 0.5% — a 780 basis point spread that remains extraordinarily wide by historical standards.

Price-to-book at 1.8x for a business generating 18% ROE. The market is pricing in minimal growth for a company that has raised its dividend 12 consecutive years. That is the mismatch.


The Call

BUY — with position sizing appropriate for a premium-quality anchor holding. Itochu most closely resembles Berkshire Hathaway's own model: diversified, consumer-weighted, defensive, and consistently returning capital.

  • Entry range: ¥6,800–7,200
  • 12-month target: ¥8,000 (11-12x FY2026 estimated EPS)
  • Risk: LOW-MEDIUM (most defensive of the five)
  • Watch level: Below ¥6,400 signals China earnings deterioration exceeding thesis assumptions

Full analysis with sector comparison and interactive chart at averin.com

This is not financial advice. Positions may change. Do your own due diligence.


Tags: Japan stocks, Itochu, Sogo Shosha, Berkshire Hathaway Japan, Defensive stocks, Japanese equities, Dividend growth, TSE 8001

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