
Key Points
• Diversified earnings engine supports resilience across cycles: ORIX derives profits across nine distinct operating segments, limiting concentration risks and underpinning 61 consecutive years of profitability.
• Proactive capital recycling enhances returns and liquidity: Management actively monetises mature assets and redeploys capital toward higher-quality, recurring cash flow businesses, reducing reliance on aggressive leverage expansion.
• Decent credit profile supported by stable leverage and decent coverage: ORIX’s leverage has been stable over the past 5 financial years, while interest coverage remains decent due to the group’s diversified earnings mix.
• About the bonds: ORIX 2030-2035 USD bonds offer attractive yields ranging from 4.76% to 5.21%, representing a decent yield pickup compared to similar-rated peers and healthy yield spreads against comparable sovereigns.
Company Profile
Founded in 1964 in Japan, ORIX Corporation (ORIX) has evolved from its humble beginnings as an equipment leasing company into a global financial services and investment conglomerate. Today, ORIX operates across 30 countries and regions worldwide, with 10 operating segments (see Table 1 below for the full breakdown and brief descriptions of each segment).
Table 1: About ORIX’s operating segments
|
Operating Segment |
Brief description |
|
Corporate Financial Services & Maintenance Leasing |
Japan-focused SME and corporate platform offering equipment leasing, corporate lending, and a full suite of automotive services, including leasing, rental, car sharing, and used car sales |
|
Real Estate |
Encompasses property development, leasing, and management across offices, logistics, and residential assets, alongside the operation of hotels, inns, and aquariums, and third-party real estate asset management |
|
Private Equity (PE) Investment & Concession |
Combines a hands-on private equity investment model – focused on operational improvement and network-driven value creation – with the operation of key public infrastructure concessions, including three Kansai-region airports and domestic water utility assets |
|
Environment & Energy |
Operates a diversified energy and environmental platform spanning renewable power generation (solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, and biomass) across Japan and internationally, electric power retail, energy-saving services, solar panel sales, waste management, and resource recycling |
|
Insurance |
Underwrites life and medical insurance, which are distributed via a broad multi-channel network of agencies and partner financial institutions, with a focus on accessible, competitively priced coverage for the Japanese retail market |
|
Banking & Credit |
To be divested by second half of 2026 |
|
Aircraft & Ships |
Provides aircraft and ship leasing, financing, and asset management services. The aviation business is anchored by a 30% stake in Avolon Holdings and combines owned-fleet leasing with third-party asset management, sale-and-leaseback, and investment arrangement services. The shipping business offers vessel leasing, chartering, and brokerage, bolstered by the acquisitions of Santoku Senpaku and Somec. |
|
ORIX USA |
Diversified U.S. financial services and alternative asset management platform spanning private credit, real estate finance, municipal bonds, and private equity |
|
ORIX Europe |
European asset management platform centred on Robeco, offering active equity and fixed income investment strategies to institutional clients globally, with a differentiated sustainable investing capability and AUM of approximately EUR 214b |
|
Asia and Australia |
Operates a network of financial services subsidiaries across Southeast Asia, East Asia, South Asia, Oceania, and the Middle East, providing equipment and automobile leasing, sales finance, corporate lending, and rentals, with select subsidiaries in Greater China also engaged in private equity investment |
|
Data as of 31 March 2026. Source: Company data, iFAST compilations. |
|
Recent FY26.3 highlights
For the financial year ending 31 March 2026 (FY26.3), ORIX delivered a strong set of results: revenue rose 16% YoY to ¥3.3T, with operating income growing faster at 37% YoY to ¥456.2B. We also point out that operating margin improved to 13.7%, compared to FY25’s 11.5%, showcasing the group’s increasing profitability. More importantly, these figures have translated into core cash generation: operating cash flow (OCF) rose a modest 5.3% YoY to ¥1.4T while free cash flow (FCF) swung positive to ¥37.1B.
Looking ahead, management is guiding for double-digit YoY growth in segmental and pre-tax profits due to aircraft leasing and the upcoming asset management fee contribution from the integration of Hilco Global. Net income is projected to grow 18.5% YoY to ¥530.0B for FY27.3. That said, this is mainly due to the impending sale of ORIX Bank to Daiwa Next Bank, which is expected to be finalised by October 2026, and generate approximately ¥124.2B in pre-tax gains. We also note that there is a potential upside (unquantified) from ORIX’s indirect Toshiba/Kioxia exposure (through equity holding) that was flagged by management but excluded from official guidance.
Diversified earnings engine supports resilience across cycles
ORIX’s credit story rests on a simple but powerful foundation: 9 operating segments (post-ORIX Bank divestment) spanning leasing, insurance, private equity & concession, renewable energy, aircraft and asset management. We highlight that no single unit accounts for more than 17% of total segment profits (see chart 1 below). Critically, the group’s earnings mix is deliberately structured across three layers: 1) recurring and stable, 2) cyclical, and 3) transaction-driven and lumpy.
The first layer, recurring and stable earnings contributors, accounts for roughly 43% of FY26.3 segment profits, exhibits the most stable margin profiles over the last five years (see Table 2 below), and is anchored by Insurance, Corporate Financial Services & Maintenance Leasing, ORIX Europe, and Asia & Australia. Insurance is the standout, generating ¥102.9B (FY26.3) at a stable 12-16% margin since FY22.3, underpinned by structural premium-claims spreads that are largely insulated from short-term economic noise. Asset management in ORIX Europe and Asia & Australia together contribute roughly ¥114.3B of recurring fee income, with ORIX Europe posting the cleanest margin profile (5Y average margin of 20.0%, within a tight 17–22% band). Corporate Financial Services & Maintenance Leasing rounds out this layer with ¥100.7B of steady lease and finance income that reprices gradually — its elevated FY22.3 55% margin reflects the one-off Yayoi divestment, with the underlying business normalised at 18–21% since FY23.3.
ORIX USA, while historically a consistent Layer 1 contributor averaging ~30% margins across FY22.3–FY25.3 across its diversified US private credit, real estate finance, and asset management platform, is treated as temporarily displaced in FY26.3 following the Hilco Global acquisition, which triggered goodwill impairments and elevated credit provisions that reduced segment profits to near zero. We view this as an execution risk rather than a structural impairment of the business and expect ORIX USA to normalise back toward its historical earnings profile (9% of segmental profits) as integration progresses and the US rate environment eases — though this remains a key segment to monitor over the near term.
The second layer consists of cyclical but real earnings contributor, accounting for approximately 9% of FY2026 segment profits, where Aircraft & Ships generates genuine recurring economics but moves with the aviation cycle. The segment delivered ¥66.6B at a ~51% margin in FY2026, consistently elevated since FY2023 as the post-Avolon book matured and aircraft lease rates remained strong in a supply-constrained market. That said, aviation remains inherently cyclical, and Avolon's equity-method contribution moves with industry conditions.
The third layer captures the transaction-driven and lumpy contributors, accounting for the remaining approximately 39% of FY2026 segment profits, where PE Investment & Concession, Real Estate, and Environment & Energy are the primary volatility injectors. PE & Concession margins have expanded meaningfully as the portfolio matured (from -3% in FY2022 to 28% in FY2026), but year-on-year movement is inherently exit-timing dependent. Real Estate, while appearing stable within a 13–15% margin band, is similarly transaction-driven in nature — revenue recognition is largely tied to condominium completion timelines, property disposals, and fund exits, making the apparent margin consistency a function of sustained deal activity rather than contractual recurring income. Environment & Energy's 55% FY2026 margin was almost entirely driven by the one-off ¥83.1B Greenko gain and will not repeat at that magnitude — stripping this out, the segment's underlying earnings profile is more modest and subject to power price volatility and regulatory risk across its global renewable energy portfolio.
What emerges is a three-layered earnings structure: a reliable recurring core that covers debt service in most environments, amplified in good years by transaction gains, and partially offset in stress years by impairments concentrated in the more volatile units. We think this is best exemplified by the group’s commendable track record of having reported 61 years of uninterrupted profitability.
Chart 1: A well-diversified profit contribution mix from ORIX’s various operating segments (average over the last five financial years)

Table 2: Historical profit margins of ORIX’s various operating segments
|
Segmental Profit Margin |
FY22.3 (31 Mar 21) |
FY23.3 (31 Mar 22) |
FY24.3 (31 Mar 24) |
FY25.3 (31 Mar 25) |
FY26.3 (31 Mar 26) |
|
Corporate Finance & Maintenance Leasing |
55%* |
18% |
19% |
20% |
21% |
|
Insurance |
12% |
13% |
13% |
14% |
16% |
|
ORIX Europe |
22% |
21% |
18% |
17% |
22% |
|
Asia & Australia |
39% |
23% |
21% |
15% |
21% |
|
ORIX USA |
52% |
32% |
16% |
26% |
~0%** |
|
Aircraft & Ships |
8% |
56% |
68% |
56% |
51% |
|
PE Investment & Concession |
(3)% |
1% |
12% |
26% |
28% |
|
Real Estate |
8% |
13% |
14% |
14% |
15% |
|
Environment & Energy |
2% |
17% |
23% |
(3)% |
55% |
|
*Figure is inflated due to a one-off sale of a
subsidiary Source: Company Data, iFAST compilations. |
|||||
Proactive capital recycling enhances returns and liquidity
ORIX has long operated with a simple philosophy toward capital allocation: acquire assets, grow them, monetise them when valuations are attractive, and recycle the proceeds into higher-returning opportunities. Management describes this mindset plainly — “ORIX does not cling to assets and can exit flexibly. The mindset of knowing when to sell has become part of ORIX culture.”
The recent monetisation of Greenko provides a clear example of this strategy in action. ORIX initially invested in the Indian renewable energy operator in March 2021 before fully exiting the position in FY2026 and reallocating capital into AM Green, reflecting a shift toward next-generation green molecule opportunities as the energy transition evolves. The disposal generated an ¥83.1B gain in FY2026, making it the largest earnings contributor within the Environment & Energy segment for the year. We view this as a strong demonstration of management’s willingness to crystallise value and unlock liquidity when market conditions are favourable.
Importantly, management intends to institutionalise this recycling model further under its FY28.3 (ending 31 March 2028) medium-term plan. The group is targeting an 11% ROE (vs. 10.4% currently), with proceeds from lower-returning assets increasingly redeployed into higher-margin fee-based businesses such as asset management, where group AUM is expected to expand from ¥81T to ¥100T. This shift is strategically meaningful from a credit perspective, in our opinion, as fee-based earnings are typically less capital-intensive and allow ORIX to generate stronger returns while reducing balance sheet burden. In addition, third-party investors bear a larger share of the underlying asset risk, while ORIX continues to earn recurring management and performance fees.
The announced sale of ORIX Bank reinforces the same capital allocation discipline. The business carried a sizeable ¥3.2T asset base but generated only ¥27.2B in profits, implying relatively modest returns on capital. By exiting the business and redeploying proceeds into higher-returning segments, ORIX improves both capital efficiency and liquidity flexibility. Overall, we believe this self-funding growth model — supported by disciplined asset monetisation and reinvestment into higher-return businesses — should support a gradual improvement in returns while preserving balance sheet strength and debt-servicing capacity across cycles.
Decent credit profile supported by stable leverage and decent coverage
ORIX's credit profile has been decent over the past 5 financial years: Gross debt/equity sits at a conservative 1.5x at FY26.3, which has been stable over the last five financial years, demonstrating disciplined balance sheet management as the group continues growing its business. The improvement has been driven by retained earnings compounding faster than incremental funding needs — shareholders' equity expanded 36% to ¥4.5T (over the last 5 years), against ex-deposit gross debt growth of 34% (over the last 5 years) to ¥6.5T.
ORIX has a decent liquidity profile; as of 31 March 2026, the group has ¥1.7T in total available liquidity (¥961.5B in cash and cash equivalents and ¥753.6B in available commitment lines). Note: these figures exclude the amounts carried by ORIX Bank (to be divested) and ORIX Insurance. Gross debt stood at ¥6.54T, comprising ¥572B of short-term debt and ¥5.97T of long-term debt. We highlight that the group’s cash position comfortably covers its short-term debt; therefore, we do not anticipate any near-term refinancing need.
Beyond leverage and coverage, asset-quality metrics remain contained (see Table 3 below). The non-performing loan ratio (across net investment in leases and instalment loans) has crept up modestly to 2.1% in FY26.3 from 1.7% in FY22.3, while the provisioning rate has risen to 0.4% from 0.2% over the same period. With total allowance for credit losses rising to ¥80.2B (from ¥56.7B a year earlier), we view these trends as prudent through-cycle reserving rather than a fundamental deterioration in asset quality.
The group’s liquidity profile is bolstered by its consistent and growing operating cash flow (OCF). As seen in chart 2 below, ORIX has generated an average of ¥1.2T per year in OCF over FY22.3 – FY26.3, with a clear upward trend since bottoming in FY23.3. OCF has expanded by ~50% from ¥913.1B (FY23.3) to ¥1.4T (FY26.3), underscoring the strength and scalability of the underlying business. Capital expenditure (Capex) — defined here as purchases of lease equipment plus property under facility operations — has averaged ¥1.2T, broadly tracking OCF.
We think ORIX, due to its multiple asset-intensive businesses, is more capital-intensive in nature; consequently, free cash flow (FCF) has been structurally volatile, oscillating between negative and positive territory over the last five years. From a credit perspective, however, we are not concerned: the swings reflect the timing of ORIX's continuous reinvestment into income-generating assets rather than any operating weakness. This growth investment has been accompanied by a steadily expanding equity and asset base, consistently growing earnings, and a well-capitalised balance sheet — meaning the group is funding its asset growth from a position of strength rather than stretching its credit profile.
Interest coverage ratio (Net OCF / annual interest expense) has stabilised around 7x after compressing from the 16x post-pandemic high as foreign-currency funding costs lifted with global rates before easing more recently (FY23.3 – FY26.3). Nevertheless, we remain comfortable with this metric given the group’s recurring earnings anchor that generates cash flow well more than annual interest obligations, even before considering contributions from the transaction-driven segments, which support ORIX’s debt-servicing capacity.
Chart 2: Consistent operating cash generation

Source: Company Data, iFAST compilations. As of 31 March 2026.
Table 3: Decent coverage while leverage has been stable
|
Credit metrics |
FY22.3 |
FY23.3 |
FY24.3 |
FY25.3 |
FY26.3 |
|
Gross debt/equity ratio |
1.5x |
1.6x |
1.6x |
1.5x |
1.5x |
|
NPL ratio |
1.7% |
1.7% |
1.9% |
2.2% |
2.1% |
|
Provisioning rate |
0.2% |
0.3% |
0.4% |
0.3% |
0.4% |
|
Interest Coverage ratio (Net OCF / annual interest expense) |
16.2x |
7.2x |
6.6x |
7.7x |
7.1x |
|
Data as of 31 March 2026. Source: Company Data, iFAST compilations. |
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Table 4: Bond recommendation
|
Issue |
Issuer |
Ask Price |
Yield to Worst (%) |
Years to Maturity |
Credit Rating (S&P / Moody’s / Fitch) |
|
ORIX Corporation |
98.82 |
4.76% |
4.3 |
BBB+ / A3 / A- |
|
|
ORIX Corporation |
95.52 |
4.89% |
5.9 |
BBB+ / A3 / A- |
|
|
ORIX Corporation |
101.31 |
5.21% |
8.8 |
BBB+ / A3 / A- |
|
|
Data as of 28 May 2026 Source: Bloomberg, Bondsupermart, iFAST compilations. |
|||||
Overall, we think ORIX has a solid investment-grade credit profile, underpinned by a diversified earnings stream across 9 segments that has delivered consistent profitability across market cycles. Leverage has remained stable, while interest coverage is still decent. Management’s pivot toward higher-margin, recurring fee-based asset management should reinforce earnings resilience. Combined with a disciplined track record of capital recycling and balance sheet management, we expect ORIX’s credit profile to remain stable with scope for modest improvement.
In our view, ORIX’s proactive capital recycling is a key credit strength, allowing the group to internally generate liquidity through portfolio monetisation rather than relying excessively on external funding markets to support growth. That said, recycling depends on execution and market conditions, and the associated gains can be lumpy.
Finally, we highlight that ORIX’s bonds are issued at the group level, while most of the group’s assets and cash sit within subsidiaries. While we see a distressed scenario as highly unlikely, in such an event, group-level creditors could face structural subordination, ranking behind subsidiary-level obligations.
Looking at Table 4 above, we highlight three ORIX bonds: these issues have intermediate tenors, from 4.3 years to 8.8 years, with yields-to-worst ranging from 4.76% to 5.21%. Against comparable US treasuries, these bonds provide a decently attractive 60+ - 80+ bps yield spread. Looking at the chart below, against comparable peers (US financials with similar credit ratings), we find ORIX’s bonds to be fairly priced.
For investors seeking decently attractive income from a fairly stable creditor, these ORIX bonds may warrant consideration.

Source: Bloomberg, iFAST compilations. As of 28 May 2026
Declaration: For specific disclosure, at the time of publication of this report, IFPL (via its connected and associated entities) holds NIL positions and the analyst who produced this report holds NIL positions in the abovementioned securities. This research report was prepared with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) tools. iFAST Financial Pte Ltd does not rely exclusively on AI for content generation; the content of this report – including all investment theses, ratings, price targets and conclusions – has been independently reviewed and verified by the research analyst(s) to ensure accuracy and professional integrity.
