Japan's General Trading Houses  ·  Company Deep Dive

Mitsui & Co.:
the iron ore and LNG one — with the sector's most aggressive growth bet

Classify the big five sōgō shōsha by what actually drives their profits, and Mitsui stands apart. Itochu is consumer goods, retail and FamilyMart. Mitsubishi is a diversified machine anchored in copper and urban development. Mitsui is iron ore, LNG and industrial hard assets — deeper, longer-duration and more capital-intensive than most peers want to be. That combination has produced ¥1 trillion of Core Operating Cash Flow for five straight years and a copper portfolio set to nearly triple by 2035. The question now is whether MTMP2029's ¥1.4T profit target for 2029 — the most ambitious in the sector — is a roadmap or a stretch goal.

8031.T · MTSUY TSE Prime May 2026 Based on FY2025 Earnings Release & MTMP2029 (May 2026)
Share Price
¥5,327
22 May 2026 · TSE
Forward P/E
16.4×
¥5,327 ÷ EPS ¥324.6
FY2026 Guided Profit
¥920B
+10.3% YoY · COCF ¥1.05T
Dividend Yield
2.6%
¥140 guided floor · progressive

Five consecutive years at ¥1 trillion: why that matters

The number that defines Mitsui's recent history is ¥1 trillion — and specifically, the fact that Core Operating Cash Flow (COCF) has exceeded ¥1 trillion for five straight fiscal years. FY2025 COCF was ¥978.9B — down year on year but still above the ¥950B management had guided. Across the entire three-year MTMP2026 period (FY2023–2025), cumulative COCF was ¥3.0 trillion, against a target of ¥2.75 trillion.

COCF matters more than reported profit at Mitsui because the company's earnings mix is partly driven by dividend income from equity investments — some of which is lumpy and timing-sensitive. The Mineral & Metal Resources and Energy segments, in particular, generate large one-off dividend payments from LNG and iron ore projects that can fall in different quarters year to year. COCF adjusts for working capital changes and lease repayments to give a cleaner picture of recurring cash generation. A sustained ¥1T+ COCF level means Mitsui can simultaneously invest at scale, pay progressive dividends and buy back stock — without borrowing to do it.

FY2025 reported profit fell to ¥834.0B from ¥900.3B a year earlier, driven by weaker iron ore and metallurgical coal prices, lower LNG dividends and the absence of large asset-recycling gains that inflated FY2024. But both COCF and profit beat guidance: management had guided ¥950B and ¥820B respectively.

The key signal from FY2025: Mitsui beat a conservative guide by meaningful margins on both COCF and profit, extended its COCF track record to five years, and raised the dividend to ¥115 per share — up from ¥100. ROE was 10.2%, and the MTMP2026 average was 12.5% — above the over-12% target.

MTMP2029: the three strategic initiatives and the 2029 target

Mitsui's Medium-term Management Plan 2029 — covering FY2026 to FY2028 — was released on 1 May 2026 alongside the FY2025 results. The plan's headline is unambiguous: a vision for profit above ¥1.4 trillion by fiscal year 2029, with ROE above 13%. That is a 68% increase from FY2025's ¥834B profit. Whether or not that target materialises in full, it tells you something important about how management is positioning the business: this is not a steady-state dividend story; it is a growth story underpinned by three evolving strategic frameworks.

The three frameworks, now designated as "2.0" versions of their MTMP2026 predecessors, are:

IBS 2.0
Industrial Business Solutions 2.0
Iron ore (Rhodes Ridge, one of the world's largest deposits), copper (AAS Chile, Collahuasi), mobility (automotives, ships, aerospace), and digital BPO services. FY2025 profit: ¥490B combined. Investment allocation over MTMP2029 period: ¥780B.
GET 2.0
Global Energy Transformation 2.0
Gas value chain (LNG, natural gas, ammonia), digital and power value chain (data centres, AI compute, renewable power), and clean molecules (next-generation fuels, blue ammonia). FY2025 profit: ¥250B combined. Investment allocation: ¥690B.
WEC 2.0
Wellness Ecosystem Creation 2.0
IHH Healthcare (80 hospitals across 10 countries, 800,000+ patients/year), pharma innovation using clinical data, protein ecosystem (shrimp, broilers, salmon) and food supply chains. FY2025 profit: ¥85B combined. Investment allocation: ¥180B.
MTMP2029 — the governing framework
By FY2028: COCF of ¥1.2 trillion, Profit of ¥1.1 trillion, ROE of 12%. Shareholder returns at 50% of COCF across the three-year period. Progressive dividend with ¥140/share as a hard floor for MTMP2029 — a policy of maintained or increased dividends only. The ¥1.4T+ 2029 vision sits beyond the three-year plan, driven by full ramp-up of major investments including Rhodes Ridge iron ore (first ore 2030), UAE Ruwais LNG, Blue Point low-carbon ammonia and Indonesia's Tangguh LNG expansion.

The path from ¥834B (FY2025) to ¥1.4T+ (FY2029 vision) has three identified contributors: middle game initiative improvements of ¥200B+, earnings from MTMP2026 growth investments of ¥150B+ (net increase over FY2025), and new earnings from MTMP2029 growth investments of ¥200B+. These are management estimates, not guarantees — but they do illustrate where Mitsui expects earnings acceleration to come from.

The AI compute value chain: a new dimension under GET 2.0

The most strategically distinctive element of MTMP2029 versus its predecessor is the explicit buildout of a digital and power value chain under GET 2.0. In April 2026, Mitsui established a new Digital & Infrastructure Solutions Business Unit and an AI Strategy Unit (within the IT & Communication Business Unit). The framework runs from semiconductor supply chain procurement through data centre construction and operations, power supply integration (combining Mitsui's existing IPP and energy trading capabilities), and ultimately to AI deployment and utilisation across its own diverse operational businesses.

Management targets ¥90B of annual profit from the digital and power value chain by FY2029, against ¥40B in FY2025. This is still a relatively small portion of the total earnings base, but the structural logic — a global business with proprietary data from mining operations, hospital networks, food supply chains and trading desks deploying AI across all of them — is strategically coherent.

FY2025 results: the details behind the headline decline

The FY2025 reported profit of ¥834.0B — down ¥66.3B year on year — reflected a specific set of headwinds rather than a broad deterioration in business quality. Understanding what drove the decline matters for assessing forward trajectory.

COCF & Profit (¥B)
FY2023–FY2025 actual · FY2026 = guided
FY2028 Segment Profit Targets (¥B)
FY2025 actual vs FY2028 target · from MTMP2029

Why profit fell: the three headwinds

The ¥66.3B decline in profit was driven primarily by lower commodity prices (iron ore and metallurgical coal down, copper partially offsetting), absent LNG dividend timing (large LNG dividends were booked in the prior-year Q2, did not repeat in the same period), and the absence of large asset-recycling gains from Paiton coal power (Indonesia) and VLI freight service (Brazil) disposals that boosted FY2024. Base profit actually increased — Mitsui's "middle game" initiatives generated ¥52B of base profit improvement in FY2025, hitting the ¥170B cumulative three-year target set at the start of MTMP2026.

Metric FY2023 FY2024 FY2025 actual FY2026 guided Change
COCF (¥B) ¥995.8B ¥1,027.5B ¥978.9B ¥1,050B +7.3%
Net Profit (¥B) ¥1,063.7B ¥900.3B ¥834.0B ¥920B +10.3%
ROE 15.3% 11.9% 10.2% ~11%E
EPS (¥) ¥355.2 ¥313.3 ¥294.3 ¥324.6 +10.3%
DPS (¥) ¥85 ¥100 ¥115 ¥140 +21.7%
BPS (¥) ¥2,518 ¥2,626 ¥3,094 +17.8%

Source: Mitsui & Co. FY2025 Earnings Release (May 2026, IFRS). FY2026 = management guidance.

Segment contributions

The most important structural point is that Mineral & Metal Resources remains the single largest profit contributor at ¥253.6B in FY2025 (30% of total), while Energy follows at ¥157.8B (19%). But the pattern is shifting: the Machinery & Infrastructure segment — which includes IHH Healthcare, automotives, shipping and the emerging digital infrastructure businesses — generated ¥232.3B of profit (28%), comparable to Energy. Management's FY2028 targets push this Mobility/Digital/Infrastructure segment to ¥270B — the fastest projected growth outside of Energy.

Segment FY2025 Profit FY2028 Target Change Main drivers
Mineral & Metal Resources ¥253.6B ¥300B +18% Rhodes Ridge ramp-up, copper volume growth (AAS, Collahuasi)
Mobility, Digital & Infra ¥232.3B ¥270B +16% Digital & power value chain growth, new mobility businesses
Energy ¥157.8B ¥180B +14% Waitsia Stage 2, Vaquero shale gas, LNG trading expansion
Chemicals ¥67.5B ¥110B +63% Food science growth, ITC Antwerp consolidation
Wellness Ecosystem ¥52.0B ¥110B +112% IHH expansion, healthcare + data, protein business growth
Iron & Steel Products ¥18.9B ¥35B +85% Global trading expansion, value chain sophistication
Innovation & Corp Dev ¥59.0B ¥90B +53% AI/DX solutions, BPO, financial solutions
Total ¥834.0B ¥1,100B +32% FY2028 MTMP target

Source: MTMP2029 presentation (May 2026). Segment names reflect new structure effective April 2026.

The growth pipeline: large-scale projects already in motion

Mitsui's path to ¥1.4T+ profit by FY2029 is anchored by several large-scale investments for which investment decisions have already been made — the cash is committed. Full-scale earnings contribution begins to flow over FY2026 to FY2029, creating what management describes as a visible ramp-up even without new decisions.

Rhodes Ridge
IBS 2.0 · Iron Ore
One of the world's largest undeveloped iron ore deposits in Australia. First ore expected by 2030. Mitsui's equity share of Australian iron ore production grows from 63.8Mt (FY2025) to 90Mt by FY2035. High-grade ore proximal to existing infrastructure reduces capital cost and timeline risk.
UAE Ruwais LNG
GET 2.0 · Gas Value Chain
Major LNG liquefaction project in Abu Dhabi. First LNG expected FY2029. Consistent with Mitsui's decades-long LNG infrastructure positioning across the Middle East and builds on its existing ADNOC LNG stake (15%). Long-term offtake provides earnings stability.
Blue Point Low-Carbon Ammonia
GET 2.0 · Clean Molecules
US low-carbon ammonia project for export to Asian markets. In construction / FID stage. Part of a broader "clean molecule" strategy alongside next-generation fuels in Portugal and Mozambique LNG. FY2028 earnings contribution targeted at early stages.
AAS Copper (Chile)
IBS 2.0 · Copper
Anglo American Sur (AAS) integrated operation to start 2030. Mitsui's copper equity production grows from 91Kt (FY2025) to 250Kt by FY2035 — a 2.7× increase — through AAS operational integration, Collahuasi expansion and acquisition of new interests.
IHH Healthcare Expansion
WEC 2.0 · Healthcare + Data
IHH operates ~80 hospitals across 10 countries with 16,500+ beds and ~800,000 patients/year. Mitsui targets 3× profit growth from ¥20B (FY2025) to ¥60B (FY2029 vision) through advanced medical care expansion and pharma innovation via clinical data utilisation.
Digital Infrastructure / AI
GET 2.0 · Digital & Power Value Chain
New Digital & Infrastructure Solutions Business Unit (April 2026) and AI Strategy Unit. Targets ¥90B profit by FY2029 vs ¥40B today. Value chain spans semiconductor supply, data centre operation, stable power supply (combining IPP with energy management), and AI deployment across Mitsui's global businesses.
What these investments have in common: they are long-duration infrastructure assets with predictable cash flows once operational, and many are already committed — the FID is done, the equity is deployed. The FY2029 earnings ramp from ¥834B to ¥1.4T+ is substantially driven by these projects entering production, not by management needing to find new deals.

Capital allocation: how ¥5 trillion of cash is deployed over three years

The MTMP2029 capital allocation framework is explicit. Over the three-year period FY2026–FY2028:

Cash allocation item MTMP2029 period (3yr) Note
COCF ¥3,430B Primary cash generation across three fiscal years
Asset recycling (planned) ¥1,310B Disposal of non-core and lower-ROIC assets
Investments to strengthen existing businesses ¥680B Sustaining CAPEX and operational improvements
Investments for growth (decided) ¥970B IBS 2.0 ¥780B · GET 2.0 ¥690B · WEC 2.0 ¥180B
Total dividend amount ¥1,190B Floor ¥140/share; progressive policy (no cuts)
Management Allocation (flexible) Residual Competitive growth investments + additional shareholder returns

Two things stand out. First, Mitsui has set ¥140/share as the absolute floor dividend for MTMP2029 — under the progressive dividend policy, dividends can only be maintained or increased. At the current ¥5,327 share price, ¥140 implies a minimum 2.6% yield. The dividend has grown from ¥42.5/share in FY2020 to ¥115 in FY2025 — a CAGR of 22% — and FY2026 guidance of ¥140 is a further 21.7% increase.

Second, the shareholder returns as a percentage of COCF is targeted at 50% for the MTMP2029 period, compared to the actual result of over 53% in MTMP2026. This is a slight reduction in payout discipline, which makes sense given the scale of growth investment being deployed, but it is still a very high absolute level of return.

"The payout ratio against COCF has already exceeded 53% over three years. Targeting 50% going forward means dividends and buybacks still consume half the cash flow — while growth investments get the other half." — Mitsui MTMP2029 capital allocation framework, May 2026

MTMP2026 compared to targets: the company deployed ¥2,412B of growth investments (vs. a ¥1,170B plan), recycled ¥1,481B of assets (vs. ¥870B target), and executed ¥720B of share repurchases (vs. ¥70B target). Every one of these was dramatically above the original plan — because cash generation was also materially above plan. This history of capital deployment capacity should not be overlooked.

What can move the needle: sensitivities and structural risks

Annual Profit Sensitivity to Key Market Variables
Impact on net profit per unit change · FY2026 assumptions · from MTMP2029 Earnings Release · Oil sensitivity is low relative to earnings scale
FX — the biggest lever
USD/JPY: ±¥4.6B per ¥1 move
At ¥150/USD, a ¥15 yen appreciation (to ¥135) reduces annual profit by roughly ¥69B — or about 7.5% of FY2026 guided profit. Mitsui's overseas income stream is predominantly USD-denominated, particularly mining royalties, LNG dividends, and mobility investments in the Americas. The FY2026 forex assumption is ¥150/USD, ¥100/AUD. Yen weakness remains a structural tailwind for now.
Iron Ore — the commodities King
Iron Ore: ±¥3.0B per $1/tonne
At ~63 million tonnes of equity iron ore production, iron ore prices have a meaningful direct impact. A $20/tonne decline (e.g., $100 → $80 CFR China) would reduce annual profit by roughly ¥60B. With Rhodes Ridge ramp-up adding volume through the decade, price matters more over time, not less. FY2026 price assumption is not disclosed, but FY2025 actuals averaged $100/tonne (Fe61% CFR China).
Energy Price Sensitivity
Crude Oil: ±¥1.3B / US Gas: ±¥1.6B
Crude oil sensitivity is relatively modest — ±$20/bbl moves annual profit by roughly ±¥26B, or about 3% of guided profit. US natural gas matters more per unit: Mitsui's Marcellus and Vaquero shale gas assets mean US gas prices have a direct gross profit impact. FY2026 US gas assumption is $3.50/mmBtu. Mitsui does not have large direct spot oil trading exposure.
Middle East / Geopolitical Risk
LNG commodity price normalisation
MTMP2029's FY2028 profit target of ¥1.1T assumes the Middle East situation normalises by Q2 FY2026. The scenario assumed is an easing of disruption that has kept spot LNG and oil prices elevated. If normalisation is faster (lower prices) or slower (supply disruption), earnings could deviate materially. Mitsui's exposure is largely through long-term LNG project dividends, not spot trading, providing some price insulation.

Valuation: three methods, one consistent message

At ¥5,327 per share, Mitsui trades at 16.4× forward P/E on guided FY2026 EPS of ¥324.6 — modestly above the sector midpoint of approximately 17× but below where Mitsubishi Corp trades. The P/B at current prices is approximately 1.72× on trailing BPS of ¥3,094, well below the sector low of 2.0×.

The P/B discount is notable. Mitsui's book value has grown rapidly — BPS rose 17.8% in FY2025 alone, driven by retained earnings and FVTOCI gains on financial assets. At 1.72× book, Mitsui's equity is priced below its sector floor on this metric, which implies either market scepticism about book quality or a lagged re-rating from the rapid BVPS growth.

Cheap or Expensive? — What different valuation methods say
Valuation Method Implied Price (¥) vs Current ¥5,327 Upside / (Downside)
PER Forward 17× (Sector Mid) 5,518 +191 +3.6%
P/B 2.0× (Sector Low) 6,187 +860 +16.1%
DCF Base Case (WACC 8.5%, g 3%) 6,985 +1,658 +31.1%
DCF Base Case + Share Buyback 7,206 +1,879 +35.3%
Analyst Consensus (model input) 6,819 +1,492 +28.0%

DCF assumptions: WACC 8.5%, terminal growth 3%, Y1 FCF growth 7%, Y2–5 5%, Y6–10 3%. Analyst consensus is external market data — not company guidance or investment advice. See model for full assumptions.

The P/E method gives the least upside — and in fact the sector-mid 17× multiple barely covers current prices. This reflects the fact that FY2025 earnings were a cyclical trough within the 2023–2025 arc, and the 16.4× forward P/E already prices in some recovery. The P/B and DCF methods tell a more interesting story. P/B 2.0× implies ¥6,187 — a 16% premium — because the rapid book-value growth in recent years creates a compressing starting point. The DCF base case at ¥6,985 (+31%) reflects the long-duration cash flows locked into major LNG, iron ore and copper projects already in development.

The DPS compounding argument
The DPS has grown from ¥42.5 (FY2020) to ¥115 (FY2025) to a guided floor of ¥140 (FY2026) — a CAGR of 22% over six years. Even if that growth rate halves to 11% going forward, an investor buying at ¥5,327 today would receive a yield-on-cost of over 5% within five years. For a long-duration holder, the dividend trajectory matters as much as any multiple re-rating.
DPS Growth Trajectory (¥/share, adjusted)
FY2020–FY2025 actual (post split-adjusted) · FY2026 = guided floor · 22% CAGR over 6 years

The bottom line

Mitsui & Co. is not a simple commodity play, and it is not a simple Japan domestic story. It is one of Japan's most globally diversified sōgō shōsha, with a track record of COCF generation that has now exceeded ¥1 trillion for five consecutive years. The FY2025 profit decline was real — commodity prices, LNG dividend timing and the absence of asset-recycling gains all contributed — but it masks a more constructive underlying picture: base profit improvement of ¥52B, COCF and reported profit above guidance, and the dividend increased to ¥115.

The MTMP2029 roadmap is coherent. The ¥1.1T FY2028 profit target requires ¥266B of growth over three years from a ¥834B base. Segment targets suggest roughly 30%+ of that comes from Mineral & Metal Resources (Rhodes Ridge, copper), with the rest distributed across Energy (LNG ramp-up, US gas, clean molecules), Wellness Ecosystem (IHH expansion), and the new digital and power value chain initiative. The ¥1.4T 2029 vision is more ambitious but is largely pre-funded: Rhodes Ridge, AAS copper, UAE Ruwais LNG and Tangguh LNG expansion are all committed investments.

At ¥5,327, the forward P/E of 16.4× is not obviously cheap given where the rest of the sector trades. But the P/B at 1.72× is a meaningful discount to historical norms for a business of this quality, and the DCF — anchored in long-duration infrastructure cash flows — suggests approximately 31% intrinsic upside in the base case. The primary risk is not earnings quality; it is commodity prices (especially iron ore and USD/JPY) and whether the new digital/AI value chain businesses develop at the pace management projects.

Analytical framework
At ¥5,327, Mitsui looks like a cash-compounding commodity infrastructure business with a credible growth overlay trading at a discount to intrinsic value. The ¥140/share dividend floor and 22% DPS CAGR give long-term holders a strong income compounding case even if re-rating is slow. Watch for two things: (1) FY2026 Q1 result (August 2026) — does COCF trajectory support the ¥1.05T full-year guide? (2) Rhodes Ridge / copper volume update — does equity iron ore and copper production ramp as projected? If both are on track, the re-rating case would strengthen substantially.
📊

Valuation Model — Excel

Full workbook: historical results (FY2023–2025), DCF base & buyback scenarios, multiples valuation, and dashboard. Built on company-disclosed financials from the FY2025 Earnings Release and MTMP2029 presentation. WACC, growth and buyback assumptions are editable.

↓ Download Model

For informational purposes only. This is not investment advice or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. All figures derived from Mitsui & Co., Ltd. FY2025 Earnings Release (IFRS), Medium-term Management Plan 2029 materials, and public market data as of 22 May 2026. Analyst consensus data is a model input only. Valuation model figures are user-defined estimates — not official company projections. Past performance does not indicate future results. Always verify figures against official filings at mitsui.com/ir.