Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd
F:KHE
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Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd
F:KHE
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Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd
Kawasaki Heavy Industries is a Japanese industrial company that builds large machines and transport equipment. It makes motorcycles, ships, railway vehicles, aircraft parts, gas turbines, industrial robots, and other heavy equipment used by factories, utilities, governments, and transportation companies. In simple terms, it sells complex machinery that helps move people, move goods, and power industrial work. Its customers are mainly companies and public-sector buyers that need durable equipment and long-term service support. Kawasaki makes money by selling finished products, spare parts, maintenance, and engineering services. For example, it earns from motorcycle sales to consumers and dealers, and from large contracts for trains, ships, aerospace components, and factory automation systems. What makes Kawasaki different is that it sits across several demanding parts of the manufacturing chain, from consumer motorcycles to mission-critical industrial machines. That mix gives it exposure to both mass-market and specialized business customers, but the common thread is heavy engineering. The company is known less as a brand-name consumer retailer and more as a maker of complex physical products that require precision design, manufacturing, and after-sales support.
Kawasaki Heavy Industries is a Japanese industrial company that builds large machines and transport equipment. It makes motorcycles, ships, railway vehicles, aircraft parts, gas turbines, industrial robots, and other heavy equipment used by factories, utilities, governments, and transportation companies. In simple terms, it sells complex machinery that helps move people, move goods, and power industrial work.
Its customers are mainly companies and public-sector buyers that need durable equipment and long-term service support. Kawasaki makes money by selling finished products, spare parts, maintenance, and engineering services. For example, it earns from motorcycle sales to consumers and dealers, and from large contracts for trains, ships, aerospace components, and factory automation systems.
What makes Kawasaki different is that it sits across several demanding parts of the manufacturing chain, from consumer motorcycles to mission-critical industrial machines. That mix gives it exposure to both mass-market and specialized business customers, but the common thread is heavy engineering. The company is known less as a brand-name consumer retailer and more as a maker of complex physical products that require precision design, manufacturing, and after-sales support.
Revenue Growth: The company delivered third quarter revenue of JPY 1.5614 trillion, up JPY 154 billion year-on-year, achieving record third quarter-to-date revenue, orders, and profit.
Profitability: Business profit rose to JPY 82.4 billion, despite challenges in the Powersports & Engine segment, with pretax income and net profit also increasing.
Guidance Update: Full-year pretax income and profit forecasts were raised by JPY 7 billion and JPY 8 billion, respectively, due to foreign exchange gains; revenue and business profit guidance remain unchanged.
Segment Highlights: Energy Solutions & Marine Engineering and Precision Machinery & Robot segments showed strong results, while Powersports & Engine was impacted by tariffs and U.S. market competition.
Shareholder Returns: The company shifted its dividend policy to a 4% DOE standard and raised the expected year-end dividend to JPY 91 per share; a 5:1 stock split was also announced.
Strategic Projects: Notable developments include progress in hydrogen carrier ships, significant railcar orders in the U.S., and active investment in next-generation robotics and AI.