Annual Report Amendment No.1
Table of Contents

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549


FORM 20-F/A

Amendment No. 1

(Mark One)

  ¨ REGISTRATION STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OR (g) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

OR

  x ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2005

OR

  ¨ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from              to             

Commission file number: 001-14856

ORIX KABUSHIKI KAISHA

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in our charter)

ORIX CORPORATION

(Translation of Registrant’s name into English)

Japan

(Jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

Mita NN Bldg., 4-1-23 Shiba, Minato-ku

Tokyo 108-0014, Japan

(Address of principal executive offices)

Securities registered or to be registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class


    

Name of each exchange on which registered


(1)    

   Common stock without par value, or the Shares      New York Stock Exchange*

(2)    

   American depository shares, or the ADSs, each of which represents one-half of one Share      New York Stock Exchange

Securities registered or to be registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:

None

(Title of Class)

Securities for which there is a reporting obligation pursuant to Section 15(d) of the Act:

None

(Title of Class)

Indicate the number of outstanding shares of each of the issuer’s classes of capital or common stock as of the close of the period covered by the annual report.

As of March 31, 2005, 87,388,706 Shares were outstanding, including Shares that

were represented by 2,258,320 ADSs outstanding as of March 31, 2005.


Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

Yes  x    No  ¨

Indicate by check mark which financial statement item the Registrant has elected to follow.

Item 17  ¨    Item 18  x

* Not for trading, but only for technical purposes in connection with the registration of ADSs.

 



Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

         Page

Explanatory Note

   3

Item 9.

  The Offer and Listing    4

Item 18.

  Financial Statements    6

Index to Consolidated Financial Statements

   F-1

EX-12

  Certifications required by Rule 13a-14(a)     

EX-13

  Certifications required by Rule 13a-14(b)     

 

ii


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EXPLANATORY NOTE

 

ORIX Corporation is filing this Form 20-F/A to:

 

(1) amend the table labeled “NYSE PRICE PER ADS” on page 125 in “Item 9. The Offer and Listing” of the Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2005 filed on July 14, 2005, to delete the word “(thousands)” from under the column heading “Average daily trading volume (shares)”; and

 

(2) amend the heading of the second table set forth under the text “Long-term debt at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:” on page F-38 in “Item 18. Financial Statements” to read “March 31, 2005”.

 

With the exception of the foregoing amendments, no part of the Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2005 filed on July 14, 2005 is being amended, and the filing of this Form 20-F/A should not be understood to mean that any other statements contained therein are true or complete as of any date subsequent to July 14, 2005. This Form 20-F/A is incorporated by reference into the registration statement of ORIX Corporation on Form F-3, File No. 333-109736, and into the prospectus that forms a part of that registration statement.

 

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Item 9. The Offer and Listing

 

TOKYO STOCK EXCHANGE

 

The primary market for the Shares is the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The Shares have been traded on the First Section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange since 1973 and are also listed on the First Section of The Osaka Securities Exchange. The Shares were delisted from the Nagoya Stock Exchange on October 23, 2004.

 

The Tokyo Stock Exchange is the principal Japanese stock exchange. The most widely followed price index of stocks on the Tokyo Stock Exchange is the Nikkei Stock Average, an index of 225 selected stocks traded on the First Section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

 

The following table shows the reported high and low sales prices of the Shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, excluding off-floor transactions. High and low sales price quotations from the Tokyo Stock Exchange have been translated in each case into dollars per ADS at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s noon buying rate on the relevant date or the noon buying rate on the next business day if the relevant date is not a business day.

 

TOKYO STOCK EXCHANGE PRICE SHARE

 

     Price per Share

   Translated into
dollars per ADS


     High

   Low

   High

   Low

Year ended March 31, 2001

   ¥ 16,980    ¥ 8,600    $ 81    $ 35

Year ended March 31, 2002

     13,330      8,820      56      38

Year ended March 31, 2003

     11,490      5,650      46      24

Year ended March 31, 2004

     12,550      4,850      59      20

First fiscal quarter

     6,940      4,850      29      20

Second fiscal quarter

     8,930      6,660      40      28

Third fiscal quarter

     10,030      7,590      46      35

Fourth fiscal quarter

     12,550      8,790      59      42

Year ended March 31, 2005

     14,790      9,950      71      44

First fiscal quarter

     12,940      9,950      60      44

Second fiscal quarter

     12,580      10,780      58      49

Third fiscal quarter

     13,920      11,140      67      52

Fourth fiscal quarter

     14,790      12,970      71      62

Year ending March 31, 2006

                           

First fiscal quarter

     16,800      13,330      76      63

Recent six months

                           

January 2005

     14,020      13,330      67      65

February 2005

     13,850      12,970      66      62

March 2005

     14,790      13,450      71      64

April 2005

     14,870      13,330      69      63

May 2005

     15,990      14,200      74      68

June 2005

     16,800      15,450      76      72

 

In May 2000, ORIX implemented the subdivision of each of common stock registered on its register of shareholders as of March 31, 2000 into 1.2 Shares. The per-share prices set forth above have not been adjusted to reflect that subdivision.

 

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NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

 

The ADSs are listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “IX.”

 

Two ADSs represent one share. On March 31, 2005, approximately 2,258,320 ADSs were outstanding. This is equivalent to 1,129,160 or approximately 1.3% of the total number of Shares outstanding on that date. On that date, ADSs were held by 3 record holders, including 2 record holders in the United States holding 2,258,080 ADSs. The per ADS prices below were not adjusted as a result of the share subdivision mentioned above.

 

The following table provides the high and low closing sales prices and the average daily trading volume of the ADSs on the New York Stock Exchange based on information provided by Bloomberg L.P.

 

NYSE PRICE PER ADS

 

     High

   Low

   Average daily
trading
volume
(shares)


Year ended March 31, 2001

   $ 78.25    $ 37.30    7,701

Year ended March 31, 2002

     54.85      36.55    3,037

Year ended March 31, 2003

     45.31      25.05    3,030

Year ended March 31, 2004

     57.60      20.70    3,798

First fiscal quarter

     29.00      20.70    3,276

Second fiscal quarter

     39.60      28.36    3,645

Third fiscal quarter

     45.35      35.00    4,031

Fourth fiscal quarter

     57.60      41.90    4,245

Year ended March 31, 2005

     71.75      44.05    4,702

First fiscal quarter

     58.15      44.05    6,068

Second fiscal quarter

     57.50      49.88    3,266

Third fiscal quarter

     68.60      51.79    2,838

Fourth fiscal quarter

     71.75      61.70    6,756

Year ending March 31, 2006

                  

First fiscal quarter

     76.80      64.49    5,378

Recent six months

                  

January 2005

     68.65      64.59    6,710

February 2005

     67.16      61.70    8,863

March 2005

     71.75      64.27    4,977

April 2005

     68.80      64.49    6,438

May 2005

     72.70      69.39    3,862

June 2005

     76.80      71.85    5,814

 

5


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Item 18. Financial Statements

 

See pages F-1 through F-71.

 

The following consolidated financial statements of ORIX listed below and the report thereon by its independent registered public accounting firm are filed as part of this Form 20-F:

 

  (a) Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 2004 and 2005 (page F-4)

 

  (b) Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005 (page F-5)

 

  (c) Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity for the years ended March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005 (page F-6)

 

  (d) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005 (page F-7)

 

  (e) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (page F-8 to F-70)

 

  (f) Schedule II. – Valuation and Qualifying Accounts and Reserves (page F-71)

 

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Table of Contents

INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

 

     Page

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

   F-3

Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 2004 and 2005

   F-4

Consolidated Statements of Income For the Years Ended March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005

   F-5

Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity For the Years Ended March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005

   F-6

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows For the Years Ended March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005

   F-7

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

   F-8

Schedule II. – Valuation and Qualifying Accounts and Reserves ORIX Corporation and Subsidiaries

   F-71

 

F-1


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(This page intentionally left blank.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

F-2


Table of Contents

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

 

To the Shareholders and the Board of Directors of ORIX Corporation:

 

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of ORIX Corporation (a Japanese corporation) and its subsidiaries as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, and the related consolidated statements of income, shareholders’ equity and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended March 31, 2005. In connection with our audits of the consolidated financial statements, we have also audited financial statement Schedule II. These consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedule are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedule based on our audits.

 

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

 

In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of ORIX Corporation and its subsidiaries as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended March 31, 2005, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. Also in our opinion, the related financial statement schedule, when considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a whole, presents fairly, in all material respects, the information set forth therein.

 

As discussed in Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements, as of April 1, 2002, the Company and its subsidiaries changed the accounting for unamortized deferred credits and goodwill resulting from prior business combinations and equity method investments.

 

The accompanying consolidated financial statements as of and for the year ended March 31, 2005 have been translated into United States dollars solely for the convenience of the readers. We have recomputed the translation, and, in our opinion, the consolidated financial statements expressed in Japanese yen have been translated into United States dollars on the basis set forth in Note 1 (ab).

 

KPMG AZSA &Co.

Tokyo, Japan

May 18, 2005

 

F-3


Table of Contents

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

AS OF MARCH 31, 2004 AND 2005

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 

Assets

                        

Cash and cash equivalents

   ¥ 152,235     ¥ 145,380     $ 1,354  

Restricted cash

     35,621       53,193       495  

Time deposits

     677       8,678       81  

Investment in direct financing leases

     1,453,575       1,451,574       13,517  

Installment loans

     2,234,940       2,386,597       22,224  

Allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses

     (128,020 )     (115,250 )     (1,073 )

Investment in operating leases

     536,702       619,005       5,764  

Investment in securities

     551,928       589,271       5,487  

Other operating assets

     72,049       82,651       770  

Investment in affiliates

     157,196       274,486       2,556  

Other receivables

     142,711       160,263       1,492  

Inventories

     121,441       113,203       1,054  

Prepaid expenses

     44,139       45,082       420  

Office facilities

     71,196       65,410       609  

Other assets

     178,567       189,410       1,763  
    


 


 


     ¥ 5,624,957     ¥ 6,068,953     $ 56,513  
    


 


 


Liabilities and shareholders’ equity

                        

Short-term debt

   ¥ 903,916     ¥ 947,871     $ 8,826  

Deposits

     292,545       336,588       3,134  

Trade notes, accounts payable and other liabilities

     279,852       270,737       2,521  

Accrued expenses

     96,668       95,407       888  

Policy liabilities

     592,782       550,880       5,130  

Income taxes:

                        

Current

     31,703       24,252       226  

Deferred

     122,234       155,607       1,449  

Deposits from lessees

     78,491       98,415       917  

Long-term debt

     2,662,719       2,861,863       26,649  
    


 


 


Total liabilities

     5,060,910       5,341,620       49,740  
    


 


 


Commitments and contingent liabilities

                        

Shareholders’ equity:

                        

Common stock:

                        

Authorized 259,000,000 shares

                        

Issued 84,366,314 shares in 2004 and 87,996,090 shares in 2005

     52,068       73,100       681  

Additional paid-in capital

     70,015       91,045       848  

Retained earnings:

                        

Legal reserve

     2,220       2,220       21  

Retained earnings

     481,091       570,494       5,312  

Accumulated other comprehensive loss

     (33,141 )     (1,873 )     (17 )

Treasury stock, at cost:

                        

675,307 shares in 2004 and 607,384 shares in 2005

     (8,206 )     (7,653 )     (72 )
    


 


 


       564,047       727,333       6,773  
    


 


 


     ¥ 5,624,957     ¥ 6,068,953     $ 56,513  
    


 


 


 

The accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements are an integral part of these balance sheets.

 

F-4


Table of Contents

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME

FOR THE YEARS ENDED MARCH 31, 2003, 2004 AND 2005

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Revenues:

                                

Direct financing leases

   ¥ 122,928     ¥ 112,372     ¥ 113,514     $ 1,057  

Operating leases

     159,807       166,587       181,808       1,693  

Interest on loans and investment securities

     131,590       116,744       136,035       1,267  

Brokerage commissions and net gains on

                                

investment securities

     10,857       26,025       33,906       316  

Life insurance premiums and related investment income

     138,439       134,154       137,004       1,276  

Real estate sales

     71,165       98,034       123,162       1,147  

Gains on sales of real estate under operating leases

     3,257       9,116       1,554       14  

Transportation revenues

     —         —         55,339       515  

Other operating revenues

     80,847       93,638       134,628       1,254  
    


 


 


 


Total revenues

     718,890       756,670       916,950       8,539  
    


 


 


 


Expenses:

                                

Interest expense

     71,380       60,060       56,562       527  

Costs of operating leases

     117,362       120,566       124,658       1,161  

Life insurance costs

     125,684       119,653       122,896       1,144  

Costs of real estate sales

     60,769       88,679       113,830       1,060  

Costs of transportation revenues

     —         —         46,594       434  

Other operating expenses

     41,319       52,551       82,833       771  

Selling, general and administrative expenses

     144,271       161,835       181,620       1,692  

Provision for doubtful receivables and probable loan losses

     54,706       49,592       39,574       369  

Write-downs of long-lived assets

     50,682       12,345       11,713       109  

Write-downs of securities

     14,325       5,240       4,930       46  

Foreign currency transaction loss, net

     1,211       1,577       783       7  
    


 


 


 


Total expenses

     681,709       672,098       785,993       7,320  
    


 


 


 


Operating income

     37,181       84,572       130,957       1,219  

Equity in net income of affiliates

     6,203       17,924       20,043       187  

Gains (losses) on sales of affiliates

     2,002       (542 )     3,347       31  
    


 


 


 


Income before discontinued operations, extraordinary gain, cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle and income taxes

     45,386       101,954       154,347       1,437  

Provision for income taxes

     20,808       51,444       68,826       641  

Income from continuing operations

     24,578       50,510       85,521       796  

Discontinued operations:

                                

Income from discontinued operations, net (including gains on sales of ¥3,747 million in fiscal 2004 and ¥9,964 million in fiscal 2005)

     902       4,916       10,037       93  

Provision for income taxes

     (388 )     (2,015 )     (4,062 )     (37 )

Discontinued operations, net of applicable tax effect

     514       2,901       5,975       56  

Income before extraordinary gain and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle

     25,092       53,411       91,496       852  
    


 


 


 


Extraordinary gain, net of applicable tax effect

     3,214       609       —         —    

Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle net of applicable tax effect

     1,937       —         —         —    
    


 


 


 


Net income

   ¥ 30,243     ¥ 54,020     ¥ 91,496     $ 852  
    


 


 


 


     Yen

    Dollars

 

Amounts per share of common stock:

                                

Basic:

                                

Income from continuing operations

   ¥ 293.74     ¥ 603.58     ¥ 1,016.78     $ 9.47  

Discontinued operations

     6.14       34.67       71.04       0.66  

Extraordinary gain

     38.41       7.27       —         —    

Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle

     23.15       —         —         —    

Net income

     361.44       645.52       1,087.82       10.13  

Diluted:

                                

Income from continuing operations

     277.27       563.39       937.70       8.73  

Discontinued operations

     5.77       31.47       64.48       0.60  

Extraordinary gain

     36.14       6.60       —         —    

Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle

     21.77       —         —         —    

Net income

     340.95       601.46       1,002.18       9.33  

Cash dividends

     15.00       25.00       25.00       0.23  

 

The accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements are an integral part of these statements.

 

F-5


Table of Contents

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY

FOR THE YEARS ENDED MARCH 31, 2003, 2004 AND 2005

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

     Millions of yen

   

Millions of

dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Common stock:

                                

Beginning balance

   ¥ 51,854     ¥ 52,067     ¥ 52,068     $ 485  

Exercise of warrants, stock acquisition rights and stock options

     213       1       1,032       10  

Conversion of convertible bond

     —         —         20,000       186  
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

     52,067       52,068       73,100       681  
    


 


 


 


Additional paid-in capital:

                                

Beginning balance

     69,823       70,002       70,015       652  

Exercise of warrants, stock acquisition rights and stock options

     211       8       1,031       10  

Conversion of convertible bond

     —         —         19,999       186  

Other, net

     (32 )     5       —         —    
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

     70,002       70,015       91,045       848  
    


 


 


 


Legal reserve:

                                

Beginning balance

     2,220       2,220       2,220       21  
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

     2,220       2,220       2,220       21  
    


 


 


 


Retained earnings:

                                

Beginning balance

     400,175       429,163       481,091       4,480  

Cash dividends

     (1,255 )     (2,092 )     (2,093 )     (20 )

Net income

     30,243       54,020       91,496       852  
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

     429,163       481,091       570,494       5,312  
    


 


 


 


Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss):

                                

Beginning balance

     (13,440 )     (39,747 )     (33,141 )     (308 )

Net change of unrealized gains on investment in securities

     (12,839 )     23,131       15,102       141  

Net change of minimum pension liability adjustments

     2,652       (3,785 )     6,877       64  

Net change of foreign currency translation adjustments

     (15,119 )     (15,710 )     6,019       56  

Net change of unrealized losses on derivative instruments

     (1,001 )     2,970       3,270       30  
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

     (39,747 )     (33,141 )     (1,873 )     (17 )
    


 


 


 


Treasury stock:

                                

Beginning balance

     (8,124 )     (8,247 )     (8,206 )     (77 )

Exercise of stock options

     8       202       805       7  

Other, net

     (131 )     (161 )     (252 )     (2 )
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

     (8,247 )     (8,206 )     (7,653 )     (72 )
    


 


 


 


Total shareholders’ equity

                                

Beginning balance

     502,508       505,458       564,047       5,253  

Increase, net

     2,950       58,589       163,286       1,520  
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

   ¥ 505,458     ¥ 564,047     ¥ 727,333     $ 6,773  
    


 


 


 


Summary of comprehensive income:

                                

Net income

   ¥ 30,243     ¥ 54,020     ¥ 91,496     $ 852  
    


 


 


 


Other comprehensive income (loss)

     (26,307 )     6,606       31,268       291  
    


 


 


 


Comprehensive income

   ¥ 3,936     ¥ 60,626     ¥ 122,764     $ 1,143  
    


 


 


 


 

The accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements are an integral part of these statements.

 

F-6


Table of Contents

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

FOR THE YEARS ENDED MARCH 31, 2003, 2004 AND 2005

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

     Millions of yen

   

Millions of

dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Cash flows from operating activities:

                                

Net income

   ¥ 30,243     ¥ 54,020     ¥ 91,496     $ 852  

Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:

                                

Depreciation and amortization

     118,097       121,530       132,158       1,231  

Provision for doubtful receivables and probable loan losses

     54,706       49,592       39,574       369  

Increase (decrease) in policy liabilities

     5,889       (15,771 )     (41,902 )     (390 )

Deferred tax provision (benefit)

     (23,222 )     (2,881 )     15,533       145  

Gains from securitization transactions

     (9,649 )     (446 )     (12,520 )     (117 )

Equity in net income of affiliates

     (6,203 )     (17,924 )     (20,043 )     (187 )

(Gains) losses on sales of affiliates

     (2,002 )     542       (3,347 )     (31 )

Extraordinary gain

     (3,214 )     (609 )     —         —    

Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle

     (1,937 )     —         —         —    

Gains on sales of available-for-sale securities

     (7,588 )     (8,728 )     (14,761 )     (137 )

Gains on sales of real estate under operating lease

     (3,257 )     (9,116 )     (1,554 )     (14 )

Gains on sales of operating lease assets other than real estate

     (4,424 )     (2,783 )     (4,746 )     (44 )

Write-downs of long-lived assets

     50,682       12,345       11,713       109  

Write-downs of securities

     14,325       5,240       4,930       46  

Decrease (increase) in restricted cash

     1,195       (17,393 )     (17,517 )     (163 )

Increase in trading securities

     (5,730 )     (4,831 )     (21,430 )     (200 )

Increase in inventories

     (21,894 )     (18,197 )     (21,906 )     (204 )

Increase in prepaid expenses

     (2,975 )     (1,974 )     (975 )     (9 )

Increase (decrease) in accrued expenses

     (2,370 )     7,481       8,255       77  

Increase in deposits from lessees

     4,303       683       19,567       182  

Other, net

     25,175       2,032       (36,058 )     (337 )
    


 


 


 


Net cash provided by operating activities

     210,150       152,812       126,467       1,178  
    


 


 


 


Cash flows from investing activities:

                                

Purchases of lease equipment

     (923,483 )     (873,248 )     (942,489 )     (8,777 )

Principal payments received under direct financing leases

     742,183       731,702       633,724       5,901  

Net proceeds from securitization of lease receivables, loan receivables and securities

     239,050       35,704       191,976       1,788  

Installment loans made to customers

     (1,214,672 )     (1,130,986 )     (1,545,297 )     (14,390 )

Principal collected on installment loans

     1,071,841       1,092,698       1,287,144       11,986  

Proceeds from sales of operating lease assets

     62,323       116,531       73,928       688  

Investment in and dividends received from affiliates, net

     (23,208 )     5,822       (48,257 )     (449 )

Proceeds from sales of investment in affiliates

     2,232       —         14,327       133  

Purchases of available-for-sale securities

     (193,580 )     (90,527 )     (219,890 )     (2,048 )

Proceeds from sales of available-for-sale securities

     264,021       164,860       127,452       1,187  

Maturities of available-for-sale securities

     95,187       88,601       82,373       767  

Purchases of other securities

     (23,674 )     (32,707 )     (24,283 )     (226 )

Proceeds from sales of other securities

     21,413       12,648       11,456       107  

Purchases of other operating assets

     (2,847 )     (8,966 )     (9,216 )     (86 )

Proceeds from sales of other operating assets

     63,596       10,468       3,539       33  

Acquisitions of subsidiaries, net of cash acquired

     (13,669 )     (8,861 )     (12,506 )     (116 )

Sales of subsidiaries, net of cash disposed

     36,469       24       —         —    

Other, net

     (20,232 )     10,215       (31,985 )     (297 )
    


 


 


 


Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities

     182,950       123,978       (408,004 )     (3,799 )
    


 


 


 


Cash flows from financing activities:

                                

Net increase (decrease) in debt with maturities of three months or less

     (210,544 )     50,109       (34,227 )     (319 )

Proceeds from debt with maturities longer than three months

     2,262,069       1,640,244       1,934,048       18,010  

Repayment of debt with maturities longer than three months

     (2,624,803 )     (2,051,777 )     (1,665,050 )     (15,505 )

Net increase in deposits due to customers

     37,224       30,078       44,043       410  

Issuance of common stock

     392       8       2,052       19  

Dividends paid

     (1,255 )     (2,092 )     (2,093 )     (19 )

Net increase (decrease) in call money

     (5,000 )     5,000       (5,000 )     (46 )

Other, net

     (123 )     146       570       5  
    


 


 


 


Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

     (542,040 )     (328,284 )     274,343       2,555  
    


 


 


 


Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

     (1,131 )     (948 )     339       2  
    


 


 


 


Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents

     (150,071 )     (52,442 )     (6,855 )     (64 )

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

     354,748       204,677       152,235       1,418  
    


 


 


 


Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

   ¥ 204,677     ¥ 152,235     ¥ 145,380     $ 1,354  
    


 


 


 


 

The accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements are an integral part of these statements.

 

F-7


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

1. Significant Accounting and Reporting Policies

 

In preparing the accompanying consolidated financial statements, ORIX Corporation (the “Company”) and its subsidiaries have complied with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“US GAAP”), modified for the accounting for stock splits (see (o)). Significant accounting and reporting policies are summarized as follows:

 

(a) Basis of presenting financial statements

 

The Company and its domestic subsidiaries maintain their books in conformity with Japanese accounting practices, which differ in certain respects from US GAAP.

 

The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in conformity with US GAAP and, therefore, reflect certain adjustments to these companies’ books and records. The principal adjustments relate to accounting for direct financing leases, use of the straight-line method of depreciation for operating lease equipment, deferral of life insurance policy acquisition cost, calculation of policy liabilities, accounting for derivative instruments and hedging activities, accounting for goodwill and intangible assets resulting from business combinations, accounting for pension plans, and a reflection of the income tax effect on such adjustments and reclassification of discontinued operations.

 

(b) Principles of consolidation

 

The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Company and all of its subsidiaries. Investments in affiliates, where the Company has the ability to exercise significant influence by way of 20%–50% ownership or other means, are accounted for by using the equity method. A lag period of up to three months is used on a consistent basis when considered necessary and appropriate for recognizing the results of subsidiaries and affiliates.

 

The consolidated financial statements also include variable interest entities to which the Company and its subsidiaries are primary beneficiaries pursuant to FASB Interpretation No. 46 (revised December 2003) (FIN 46(R)) (“Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities”).

 

All significant intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

 

(c) Use of estimates

 

The preparation of the consolidated financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The Company has identified seven areas where it believes assumptions and estimates are particularly critical to the financial statements. These are the determination and periodic reassessment of the unguaranteed residual value for direct financing leases and operating leases (see (e)), the determination and reassessment of insurance policy liabilities and deferred policy acquisition costs (see (f)), the determination of the allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses (see (g)), the determination of impairment of long-lived assets (see (h)) and goodwill (see (w)), the determination of impairment of investment in securities (see (i)), the determination of valuation allowance for deferred tax assets (see (j)), and the determination of benefit obligation and net periodic pension cost (see (m)).

 

F-8


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

(d) Foreign currencies translation

 

The Company and its subsidiaries maintain their accounting records in their functional currency. Transactions in foreign currencies are recorded in the entity’s functional currency based on the prevailing exchange rates on the transaction date.

 

The financial statements of foreign subsidiaries and affiliates are translated into Japanese yen by applying the exchange rates in effect at the end of each fiscal year to all assets and liabilities. Income and expenses are translated at the average rates of exchange prevailing during the fiscal year. The currencies in which the operations of the foreign subsidiaries and affiliates are conducted are regarded as the functional currencies of these companies. Foreign currency translation adjustments reflected in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in shareholders’ equity are from the translation of foreign currency financial statements into Japanese yen.

 

(e) Recognition of revenues

 

Direct financing leases—Direct financing leases consist of full-payout leases for various equipment types, including office equipment, industrial machinery and transportation equipment (aircraft, vessels and automobiles). The excess of aggregate lease rentals plus the estimated unguaranteed residual value over the cost of the leased equipment constitutes the unearned lease income to be taken into income over the lease term. The estimated residual values represent estimated proceeds from the disposition of equipment at the time the lease is terminated. Estimates of unguaranteed residual values are based on current market values of used equipment and estimates of when and how much equipment will become obsolete. Certain direct lease origination costs (“initial direct costs”) are being deferred and amortized over the lease term as a yield adjustment. The unamortized balance of initial direct costs is reflected as a component of investment in direct financing leases. Amortization of unearned lease income and initial direct cost is computed using the interest method.

 

Installment loans—Interest income on installment loans is recognized on an accrual basis. Certain direct loan origination costs, offset by loan origination fees (“loan origination costs, net”), are being deferred and amortized over the contractual term of the loan as an adjustment of the related loan’s yield using the interest method.

 

Interest payments received on impaired loans are recorded as interest income unless the collection of the remaining investment is doubtful at which time payments received are recorded as reductions of principal (see Note 7).

 

Non-accrual policy—Revenues on direct financing leases and installment loans are no longer accrued at the time when principal or interest become past due 90 days or more, or earlier, if management believes their collectibility is doubtful. The Company and its subsidiaries used 180 days for suspending recognition of income prior to fiscal 2003. This change from 180 to 90 days did not have a significant effect on the Company and its subsidiaries’ results of operations or financial position. Accrued but uncollected interest is reclassified to investment in direct financing leases or installment loans in the accompanying consolidated balance sheet and becomes subject to the allowance for doubtful receivables and probable loan loss process. Cash repayments received on these accounts are applied first against any amounts due until qualifying for a return to accrual status and then any surpluses are recorded as income.

 

Operating leases—Revenues from operating leases are recognized on a straight-line basis over the contract terms. Operating lease assets are recorded at cost and are depreciated over their estimated useful lives mainly on a straight-line basis. Estimated average useful lives of principal operating lease assets classified as transportation equipment is 8 years, as measuring equipment and personal computers is 4 years, and as real estate is 25 years.

 

F-9


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Depreciation costs are included in costs of operating leases. Gains or losses arising from dispositions of operating lease assets, except real estate operating leases, are included in operating lease revenues. With respect to some sales of formerly leased real estate such as commercial buildings or residential condominiums, the Company or its subsidiaries may retain an interest in some cash flows from the real estate in the form of property management or other participation in performance of the lease asset. Where the Company or its subsidiaries have continuing involvement with the cash flows from disposal of such previously leased real estate, the gains or losses arising from such disposition are separately disclosed as “Gains on sales of real estate under operating leases” whereas if the Company or its subsidiaries have no continuing involvement with the cash flows from such disposed real estate gains or losses are reported as “Discontinued operations-Income from discontinued operations, net.” Estimates of residual values are based on current market values of used equipment and estimates of when and how much equipment will become obsolete.

 

Brokerage commissions and net gains on investment securities—Brokerage commissions and net gains on investment securities are recorded on a trade date basis.

 

Real estate sales—Revenues from the sales of real estate are recognized when a contract is in place, a closing has taken place, the buyer’s initial and continuing investment is adequate to demonstrate a commitment to pay for the property and the Company and its subsidiaries do not have a substantial continuing involvement in the property.

 

(f) Insurance premiums and expenses

 

Premium income from life insurance policies are recognized as earned premiums when due.

 

Life insurance benefits are recorded as expenses when they are incurred. Policy liabilities for future policy benefits are established for by the net level premium method, based on actuarial estimates of the amount of future policyholder benefits. The policies are characterized as long-duration policies and mainly consist of endowments, term life insurance and whole life insurance. Computation of policy liabilities and reserves necessarily includes assumptions about mortality, lapse rates and future yields on related investments and other factors applicable at the time the policies are written. The average rates of assumed investment yields are 2.0%, 1.7% and 1.6% for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The Company continually evaluates the potential for changes in the estimates and assumptions applied in determining policy liabilities, both positive and negative, and uses the results of these evaluations both to adjust recorded liabilities and to adjust underwriting criteria and product offerings.

 

FASB Statement No. 60 (“Accounting and Reporting by Insurance Enterprises”) requires insurance companies to defer certain costs associated with writing insurances (“deferred policy acquisition costs”) and amortize over the respective policy periods in proportion to anticipated premium revenue. Deferred policy acquisition costs are the costs related to the acquisition of new and renewal insurance policies and consist primarily of first-year commissions in excess of recurring policy maintenance costs and certain variable costs and expenses for underwriting policies. Amortization charged to income for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 amounted to ¥11,740 million, ¥10,017 million and ¥10,359 million ($96 million), respectively.

 

(g) Allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses

 

The allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses is maintained at a level which, in the judgment of management, is adequate to provide for probable losses inherent in lease and loan portfolios. The allowance is increased by provisions charged to income and is decreased by charge-offs, net of recoveries.

 

F-10


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Developing the allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses is subject to numerous estimates and judgments. In evaluating the adequacy of the allowance, management considers various factors, including the nature and characteristics of the obligor, current economic conditions, credit concentrations or deterioration in pledged collateral, historical loss experience, delinquencies and future cash flows expected to be received. Generally, large-balance non-homogeneous loans are individually assessed whether each of the loans is impaired. If a loan is deemed to be impaired, it is evaluated based on the present value of expected future cash flows or the fair value of the collateral securing the loan if the loan is collateral dependent. Smaller-balance homogeneous loans and lease receivables are collectively evaluated considering current economic conditions and trends, prior charge-off experience for each category of collateralized receivables and uncollateralized receivables, delinquencies and non-accruals.

 

Receivables are charged off when, in the opinion of management, the likelihood of any future collection is believed to be minimal. The Company and its subsidiaries do not have a practice of charging loans off after they are past due for a specific arbitrary period, for example, six months or one year.

 

(h) Impairment of long-lived assets

 

Effective April 1, 2002, the Company and its subsidiaries adopted FASB Statement No. 144 (“Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets”). FASB Statement No. 144 superseded FASB Statement No. 121 (“Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed Of”). Under FASB Statement No. 144, impairment losses are recorded with respect to long-lived assets used in operations, consisting primarily of real estate development projects, golf courses and other operating assets, when events and circumstances indicate that the assets might be impaired and the undiscounted cash flows estimated to be generated by those assets are less than the carrying amount of those assets. The net carrying value of assets not recoverable is reduced to fair value if lower than the carrying value. In determining fair value, appraisals prepared by independent third party appraisers or the Company’s own staff of appraisers, based on recent transactions involving sales of similar assets or other valuation techniques to estimate fair value are utilized.

 

(i) Investment in securities

 

Trading securities are reported at fair value with unrealized gains and losses included in income.

 

Available-for-sale securities are reported at fair value, and unrealized gains or losses are recorded through other comprehensive income (loss), net of applicable income taxes.

 

Held-to-maturity securities are recorded at amortized cost.

 

Generally, the Company and its subsidiaries recognize losses related to available-for-sale securities and held-to-maturity securities for which the market price has been significantly below the acquisition cost (or current carrying value if an adjustment has been made in the past) for more than six months. In addition, the Company and its subsidiaries recognize losses related to available-for-sale securities and held-to-maturity securities in certain other situations. In determining whether the decline in the market value of a debt security is other than temporary, the Company and its subsidiaries consider whether there has been a significant deterioration in a bond issuer’s credit rating, an issuer’s default or a similar event. Moreover, the Company and its subsidiaries charge against income losses related to equity securities in situations where, even though the market value has not remained significantly below the carrying value for six months, the decline in the market value of an equity security is based on issuer’s specific economic conditions and not just general declines in the related market and where it is considered unlikely that the market value of the equity security will recover within the next six months. For financial periods prior to the quarter ended March 31, 2003, the period used for considering whether impairment was other than temporary was twelve months.

 

F-11


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

(j) Income taxes

 

Income taxes are accounted for under the asset and liability method. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the future tax consequences attributable to differences between the financial statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and their respective tax bases and operating loss and tax credit carryforwards. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using enacted tax rates expected to apply to taxable income in the year in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rate is recognized in income in the period that includes the enactment date. A valuation allowance is recognized if, based on the weight of available evidence, it is “more likely than not” that some portion or all of the deferred tax asset will not be realized.

 

(k) Securitized assets

 

The Company and its subsidiaries have securitized and sold to investors certain lease receivables, loan receivables and investment in securities. In the securitization process, the assets to be securitized (“the assets”) are sold to special-purpose entities that issue asset-backed securities to the investors. The Company and its subsidiaries account for the sale when control over the assets is surrendered. When the Company and its subsidiaries sell the assets in a securitization transaction, the carrying value of the assets is allocated to the portion retained and the portion sold, based on relative fair values. The Company and its subsidiaries recognize gains or losses for the difference between the net proceeds received and the allocated carrying value of the assets sold. Any gain or loss from a securitization transaction is recorded as revenue of direct financing leases, interest on loans and investment securities, or brokerage commissions and net gains on investment securities.

 

Retained interests include senior interests, subordinated interests, servicing assets, excess spread assets and cash collateral. Retained interests are initially recorded at allocated carrying value of the assets based on their fair value and are periodically reviewed for impairment. When a decline in fair value below the carrying value of retained interests is other than temporary, the Company and its subsidiaries consider the value of the retained interests to be impaired and record a write-down of the retained interests to fair value.

 

Fair values of retained interests are estimated by determining the present value of future expected cash flows based on management’s estimates of key assumptions, including expected credit loss, discount rate and prepayment rate.

 

(l) Derivative financial instruments

 

The Company and its subsidiaries adopted FASB Statement No. 133 (“Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities”), FASB Statement No. 138 (“Accounting for Certain Derivative Instruments and Certain Hedging Activity, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133”) and FASB 149 (“Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities”). All derivatives are recognized on the balance sheet at their fair values. On the date the Company or subsidiaries enter into a derivative contract, the Company or its subsidiaries designate the derivative as either a hedge of the fair value of a recognized asset or liability or of an unrecognized firm commitment (“fair value” hedge), a hedge of a forecasted transaction or of the variability of cash flows to be received or paid related to a recognized asset or liability (“cash flow” hedge), a foreign-currency fair-value or cash-flow hedge (“foreign currency” hedge), a hedge of a net investment in foreign operation or a non-hedging transaction. For all hedging relationships, at inception the Company and its subsidiaries formally document the risk-management objective and strategy for undertaking the hedge transaction. The Company and its subsidiaries also document the hedged risk, the hedge type and the hedging instrument for each hedging activity. The Company and its subsidiaries also formally assess, both at the hedge’s inception and on an ongoing basis, whether the derivatives that are used in hedging transactions are highly effective in offsetting changes in fair values or cash flows of hedged items. When it is determined that a derivative is not highly effective for a hedge, hedge accounting is discontinued.

 

F-12


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Changes in the fair value of a derivative that is highly effective and that is designated and qualifies as a fair-value hedge, along with the loss or gain resulting from the changes of the fair value of the hedged asset or liability or unrecognized firm commitment of the hedged item that is attributable to the hedged risk, are recorded in earnings.

 

Changes in the fair value of a derivative that is highly effective and that is designated and qualifies as a cash-flow hedge are recorded in other comprehensive income (loss) to the extent that the derivative is effective as a hedge, until earnings are affected by the variability in cash flows of the designated hedged item.

 

Changes in the fair value of derivatives that are highly effective as hedges and that are designated and qualify as foreign-currency hedges are recorded in either earnings or other comprehensive income (loss), depending on whether the hedge transaction is a fair-value hedge or a cash-flow hedge. However, if a derivative is used as a hedge of a net investment in a foreign operation, its changes in fair value, to the extent effective as a hedge, are recorded in the foreign currency translation adjustments account within accumulated other comprehensive income (loss). The ineffective portion of the change in fair value of a derivative instrument that qualifies as either a fair-value hedge or a cash-flow hedge is reported in earnings.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries discontinue hedge accounting prospectively when it is determined that the derivative is no longer effective in offsetting changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item, the derivative expires or is sold, terminated, or exercised, the derivative is no longer designated as a hedging instrument, because it is unlikely that a forecasted transaction will occur, a hedged firm commitment no longer meets the definition of a firm commitment, or management determines that designation of the derivative as a hedging instrument is no longer appropriate.

 

When hedge accounting is discontinued because it is determined that the derivative no longer qualifies as an effective fair-value hedge, the Company and its subsidiaries continues to carry the derivative on the balance sheet at its fair value and no longer adjusts the hedged asset or liability for changes in fair value. When hedge accounting is discontinued because the hedged item no longer meets the definition of a firm commitment, the Company and its subsidiaries continue to carry the derivative on the balance sheet at its fair value, removes any asset or liability that was recorded pursuant to recognition of the firm commitment from the balance sheet, and recognize any gain or loss in earnings. When hedge accounting is discontinued because it is probable that a forecasted transaction will not occur, the Company and its subsidiaries continue to carry the derivative on the balance sheet at its fair value with subsequent changes in fair value included in earnings, and gains and losses that were accumulated in other comprehensive income (loss) are recognized immediately in earnings. In all other situations in which hedge accounting is discontinued, the Company and its subsidiaries continue to carry the derivative at its fair value on the balance sheet and recognize any subsequent changes in its fair value in earnings.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries also hold derivative instruments for trading purposes, customer accommodation or not qualified as hedging instruments. The Company and its subsidiaries record these derivative instruments on the balance sheet at fair value. The changes in fair values are recorded in earnings.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries occasionally purchase or originate financial instruments that contain an embedded derivative instrument. Upon acquisition or origination of such financial instrument, the Company and its subsidiaries assess whether the economic characteristics of the embedded derivative instrument are clearly and closely related to the economic characteristics of the financial instrument (“host contract”), whether the financial instrument that embodies both the embedded derivative instrument and the host contract is currently measured at fair value with changes in fair value reported in earnings, and whether a separate instrument with the same terms as the embedded instrument would meet the definition of a derivative instrument. If the embedded derivative instrument is determined not to be clearly and closely related to the host contract, is not currently measured at

 

F-13


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

fair value with changes in fair value reported in earnings, and the embedded derivative instrument would qualify as a derivative instrument, the embedded derivative instrument is separated from the host contract and valued at fair value with changes recorded in earnings.

 

(m) Pension plans

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries have trusted contributory and non-contributory funded pension plans covering substantially all of their employees. The Company and its subsidiaries adopted FASB Statement No. 87 (“Employers’ Accounting for Pensions”), and the costs of pension plans are accrued based on amounts determined using actuarial methods under the assumptions of discount rate, rate of increase in compensation level, expected long-term rate of return on plan assets and others.

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries accounted for the transfer to the Japanese Government of a substitutional portion of an employees’ pension fund in fiscal 2005 in accordance with EITF Issue No. 03-2 (“Accounting for the Transfer to the Japanese Government of the Substitutional Portion of Employee Pension Fund Liabilities”). As specified in EITF Issue No. 03-2, the entire separation process was to be accounted for at the time of completion of the transfer to the government of the benefit obligation and related plan assets as a settlement in accordance with FASB Statement No. 88 (“Employers’ Accounting for Settlements and Curtailments of Defined Benefit Pension Plans and for Termination Benefits”).

 

(n) Stock-based compensation

 

Stock-based compensation expense is accounted in accordance with APB Opinion No. 25 (“Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees”) as permitted by FASB Statement No. 123 (“Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation”) amended by FASB Statement No. 148 (“Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation—Transition and Disclosure”). FASB Statement No. 123 provides entities a choice of recognizing related compensation expense by adopting the fair value method or to continue to measure compensation using the intrinsic value approach under APB Opinion No. 25. The Company chose to use the intrinsic value approach pursuant to APB Opinion No. 25 and recognized no compensation expense in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005.

 

Had compensation cost for the Company’s stock option plans been determined consistent with FASB Statement No. 123, net income and earnings per share (EPS) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 would have been as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

As reported:

                                

Net income

   ¥ 30,243     ¥ 54,020     ¥ 91,496     $ 852  

Less: Total stock-based compensation expenses determined by fair value based method

     (1,726 )     (1,735 )     (2,199 )     (20 )

Pro forma:

                                

Net income

     28,517       52,285       89,297       832  

Net income—

                                

As reported:

                                

Basic EPS

   ¥ 361.44     ¥ 645.52     ¥ 1,087.82     $ 10.13  

Diluted EPS

     340.95       601.46       1,002.18       9.33  

Pro forma:

                                

Basic EPS

     340.81       624.78       1,061.67       9.89  

Diluted EPS

     321.55       582.64       978.45       9.11  

 

F-14


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

In December 2004, FASB Statement No. 123 (revised 2004) (“Share-Based Payment”) was issued. This statement is effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2005 (see (ae)).

 

(o) Stock splits

 

Stock splits implemented prior to October 1, 2001 have been accounted for by transferring an amount equivalent to the par value of the shares from additional paid-in capital to common stock as required by the Japanese Commercial Code (the “Code”). No accounting recognition is made for stock splits when common stock already includes a portion of the proceeds from shares issued at a price in excess of par value. This method of accounting is in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in Japan.

 

Based on an amendment to the Code, effective on October 1, 2001, the above-mentioned method of accounting based on the regulation has become unnecessary.

 

In the United States, stock splits in comparable circumstances are considered to be stock dividends and are accounted for by transferring from retained earnings to common stock and additional paid-in capital amounts equal to the fair market value of the shares issued. Common stock is increased by the par value of the shares and additional paid-in capital is increased by the excess of the market value over par value of the shares issued. Had such stock splits made prior to October 1, 2001 been accounted for in this manner, additional paid-in capital as of March 31, 2005 would have increased by approximately ¥24,674 million ($230 million), with a corresponding decrease in retained earnings. Total shareholders’ equity would remain unchanged. A stock split on May 19, 2000 was excluded from the above amounts because the stock split was not considered to be a stock dividend under accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

 

(p) Cash and cash equivalents

 

Cash and cash equivalents include cash on hand, deposits placed with banks and short-term highly liquid investments with original maturities of three months or less.

 

(q) Restricted cash

 

Restricted cash consists of cash held in trusts for the segregation of assets under an investor protection fund and deposits related to servicing agreements.

 

(r) Other operating assets

 

Other operating assets consist primarily of operating facilities (including golf courses, hotels and a training facility), which are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation, and depreciation is calculated mainly on the straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the assets. Accumulated depreciation is ¥4,248 million and ¥6,714 million ($63 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Estimated useful lives range up to 50 years for buildings, up to 56 years for fixtures and up to 20 years for machinery and equipment.

 

(s) Other receivables

 

Other receivables consist primarily of payments made on behalf of lessees for property tax, maintenance fees and insurance premiums in relation to direct financing lease contracts and receivables from the sale of lease assets and residential condominiums.

 

F-15


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

(t) Inventories

 

Inventories consist primarily of advance and/or progress payments for development of residential condominiums for sale and completed residential condominiums (including completed residential condominiums waiting to be delivered to buyers under the contracts for sale). Advance and/or progress payments for sale are carried at cost less any impairment losses and finished goods (including completed residential condominiums) are stated at the lower of cost or market. As of March 31, 2004 and 2005, advance and/or progress payments were ¥93,822 million and ¥94,974 million ($884 million), respectively, and finished goods were ¥27,619 million and ¥18,229 million ($170 million), respectively.

 

(u) Office facilities

 

Office facilities are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is calculated on a declining-balance basis or straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the assets. Accumulated depreciation is ¥22,670 million and ¥23,071 million ($215 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Estimated useful lives range up to 55 years for buildings and fixtures and up to 20 years for machinery and equipment.

 

(v) Other assets

 

Other assets consist primarily of the excess of purchase prices over the net assets acquired in acquisitions (goodwill) and other intangible assets (see (w)), deferred insurance policy acquisition costs which are amortized over the contract periods, leasehold deposits and advance payments made in relation to purchases of assets to be leased.

 

(w) Goodwill and other intangible assets

 

In June 2001, FASB Statement No. 141 (“Business Combinations”) and FASB Statement No. 142 (“Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets”) were issued. FASB Statement No. 141 requires that all business combinations be accounted for using the purchase method. Accounting for business combinations using the pooling of interests method is no longer allowed. FASB Statement No. 141 also requires that intangible assets acquired in a business combination be recognized apart from goodwill if the intangible assets meet one of two criteria—either the contractual-legal criterion or the separability criterion. The provisions of FASB Statement No. 141 apply to all business combinations initiated or business combinations accounted for by the purchase method completed after June 30, 2001. On April 1, 2002, as a result of the adoption of FASB Statement No. 141, the Company and its subsidiaries recorded a transition gain of ¥1,937 million, net of tax of ¥353 million, as a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, due to the write-off of unamortized deferred credits that existed as of March 31, 2002. The deferred credits relate to an excess of the fair value over cost arising from business combinations completed and investments accounted for by the equity method acquired before July 1, 2001.

 

FASB Statement No. 142 establishes how intangible assets (other than those acquired in a business combination) should be accounted for upon acquisition. It also addresses how goodwill and other intangible assets should be accounted for subsequent to their acquisition. Both goodwill and intangible assets that have indefinite useful lives will no longer be amortized but will be tested at least annually for impairment. Intangible assets with finite lives will continue to be amortized over their useful lives, and will be tested for impairment in accordance with FASB Statement No. 144 (“Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets”).

 

(x) Trade notes, accounts payable and other liabilities

 

Trade notes, accounts payable and other liabilities include derivative payables and minority interests.

 

F-16


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

(y) Capitalization of interest costs

 

The Company and its subsidiaries capitalized interest costs of ¥490 million, ¥222 million and ¥74 million ($1 million) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively, related to specific long-term development projects.

 

(z) Advertising

 

The costs of advertising are expensed as incurred. The total amounts charged to advertising expense in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are ¥9,472 million, ¥9,725 million and ¥13,012 million ($121 million), respectively.

 

(aa) Discontinued operation

 

The Company and its subsidiaries have followed FASB Statement No. 144 (“Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets”). FASB Statement No. 144 broadened the scope of discontinued operations to include the operating results of any component of an entity with its own identifiable operations and cash flow which is disposed of and which the Company and its subsidiaries will not have significant continuing involvement. Included in reported discontinued operations are the operating results of certain properties sold or to be disposed of by sale in fiscal 2004 and 2005 without significant continuing involvements, which results of operations for the presented periods were reclassified in the accompanying consolidated financial statements.

 

(ab) Financial statements presentation in U.S. dollars

 

The translations of the Japanese yen amounts into U.S. dollars are included solely for the convenience of the readers, using the prevailing exchange rate at March 31, 2005, which was ¥107.39 to $1.00. The convenience translations should not be construed as representations that the Japanese yen amounts have been, could have been, or could in the future be, converted into U.S. dollars at this or any other rate of exchange.

 

(ac) Earnings per share

 

Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing income from continuing operations and net income by the weighted average number of shares of common stock outstanding in each period and diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution that could occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised or converted into common stock. Earnings per share is adjusted for any stock splits and stock dividends retroactively.

 

Furthermore, as a result of applying EITF Issue No. 04-8 (“The Effect of Contingently Convertible Instruments on Diluted Earnings per Share”) to Liquid Yield Option Notes, diluted earnings per share for income from continuing operations and net income for fiscal 2004 have been restated retroactively. It did not have a dilutive effect on earnings per share for fiscal 2003.

 

(ad) Issuance of stock by a subsidiary or an affiliate

 

When a subsidiary or an affiliate issues stocks to unrelated third parties, the Company’s ownership interest in the subsidiary or the affiliate decreases. In the event that the price per share is more or less than the Company’s average carrying amount per share, the Company adjusts the carrying amount of its investment in the subsidiary and the affiliate and recognizes a gain or loss included in the consolidated statements of income in the year in which the change in ownership interest occurs.

 

F-17


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

(ae) New accounting pronouncements

 

In May 2003, FASB Statement No. 150 (“Accounting for Certain Financial Instruments with Characteristics of both Liabilities and Equity”) was issued. This Statement requires financial instruments within its scope to be classified as liabilities (or assets in some circumstances). This Statement is effective for financial instruments entered into or modified after May 31, 2003, and otherwise effective at the beginning of the first interim period beginning after June 15, 2003, except for certain mandatorily redeemable financial instruments. In addition, certain provisions in this Statement were deferred indefinitely pending further Board action. Adoption of this Statement did not have a significant effect on the Company and subsidiaries’ results of operations or financial position.

 

In December 2003, the Accounting Standards Executive Committee of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) issued Statement of Position (SOP) No. 03-3 (“Accounting for Certain Loans or Debt Securities Acquired in a Transfer”). SOP No. 03-3 requires acquired loans to be recorded at fair value and prohibits “carrying over” or creation of valuation allowances in the initial accounting for all loans acquired in a transfer that have evidence of deterioration in credit quality since origination, when it is probable that the investor will be unable to collect all contractual cash flows. SOP No. 03-3 limits the yield that may be accreted to the excess of the undiscounted expected cash flows over the investor’s initial investment in the loan. The excess of the contractual cash flows over expected cash flows may not be recognized as an adjustment of yield. Subsequent increases in cash flows expected to be collected are recognized prospectively through an adjustment of the loan’s yield over its remaining life. Decreases in expected cash flows are recognized as an impairment. SOP No. 03-3 is effective for loans acquired in fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2004. Adoption of this SOP will not have a significant effect on the Company and its subsidiaries’ results of operations or financial position.

 

In July 2004, EITF Issue No. 04-8 (“The Effect of Contingently Convertible Instruments on Diluted Earnings per Share”) was issued. EITF Issue No. 04-8 requires that contingently convertible debt instruments (“Co-Cos”) which had not been recognized as diluted potential common shares unless the conditions to exercise the rights had been met under FASB Statement No. 128 (“Earnings per Share”) be included in diluted earnings per share computation as if Co-Cos could be converted from the date of issuance regardless of whether the conditions to exercise the rights have been met. EITF Issue No. 04-8 is effective for reporting periods ending after December 15, 2004. The Company and its subsidiaries adopted this issue in fiscal 2005 (see (ac)).

 

In December 2004, FASB Statement No. 153 (“Exchange of Nonmonetary Assets—an amendment of APB Opinion No. 29”) was issued. This Statement amends the guidance in Accounting Principal Board (“APB”) Opinion No. 29 (“Accounting for Nonmonetary Transactions”), eliminating the exception to fair value accounting for nonmonetary exchanges of similar productive assets and replaces it with a general exception to fair value accounting for nonmonetary exchanges that do not have commercial substance. This Statement is effective for nonmonetary asset exchanges occurring in fiscal periods beginning after June 15, 2005. Adoption of this Statement will not have a significant effect on the Company and subsidiaries’ results of operations or financial position.

 

In December 2004, FASB Statement No. 123 (revised 2004) (FASB Statement No. 123(R)) (“Share-Based Payment”) was issued. FASB Statement No. 123(R) supersedes APB Opinion No. 25 (“Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees”) and amends FASB Statement No. 123. This Statement requires the Company to measure and record compensation expense for stock options and other share-based payment based on the instruments’ fair value. The Company is required to adopt this Statement for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2005 using a modified version of prospective application or may elect to apply a modified version of retrospective application. The Company expects to adopt this Statement using the modified version of prospective application and adoption of this Statement will not have a significant effect on the Company and subsidiaries’ results of operations or financial position.

 

F-18


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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

(af) Reclassifications

 

Certain amounts in fiscal 2003 and 2004 consolidated financial statements have been reclassified to conform to fiscal 2005 presentation. On the consolidated statements of income, costs related to operating leases, such as insurance, property taxes and other, which had been netted against revenues of “operating leases” in fiscal 2003 and 2004, were reclassified into an item of expenses, “costs of operating leases” along with depreciation cost of operating leases from fiscal 2005. And revenues and costs of office buildings sales were recorded along with revenues and costs of condominium sales. Accordingly, “residential condominium sales” and “costs of residential condominium sales” were renamed “real estate sales” and “cost of real estate sales”, respectively.

 

In addition, “interest income on deposits” on the consolidated statements of income, which had been disclosed in fiscal 2003 and 2004, was included in “other operating revenues” because it became insignificant.

 

2. Acquisitions

 

On July 31, 2002, the Company acquired a 90% interest in Nittetsu Lease Co., Ltd. from Nippon Steel Corporation. The aggregate purchase price was ¥5,016 million, which was paid in cash. The Company acquired Nittetsu Lease in line with its plans to expand its domestic leasing operations. The results of Nittetsu Lease’s operations have been included in the consolidated financial statements since the date of acquisition.

 

The fair values of the net assets acquired from this acquisition at the date of acquisition were as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

Investment in direct financing leases (net)

   ¥ 112,605

Other assets

     28,970

Intangible assets other than goodwill

     2,910

Goodwill (non-tax deductible)

     271
    

Total assets acquired

     144,756
    

Short-term and long-term debt

     131,862

Other liabilities

     7,878
    

Total liabilities assumed

     139,740
    

Net assets acquired

   ¥ 5,016
    

 

Of the ¥2,910 million of acquired intangible assets with an indefinite useful life other than goodwill, ¥1,455 million was assigned to “trademarks,” and ¥1,455 million was assigned as the value of a “shareholders agreement” and a “business cooperation agreement” that the Company signed with the seller, Nippon Steel Corporation.

 

During fiscal 2003, the Company and its subsidiaries acquired 10 other entities for a total cost of ¥25,530 million, which was paid in cash. Goodwill recognized in these transactions amounted to ¥3,127 million, which is not deductible for income tax calculation purposes. Acquisitions were made in line with the Company’s plans mainly to expand real estate operations and guarantee business in Japan.

 

On December 31, 2003, Footwork Express Co., Ltd. (previously OSL Co., Ltd.), a 69.2% owned subsidiary of the Company, acquired net assets that constituted a business of reorganization company of Footwork Logistics Corporation (previously reorganization company, Footwork Express Co., Ltd.). The aggregate purchase price was ¥3,112 million, of which ¥2,598 million was paid on December 31, 2003 and ¥514 million was paid on

 

F-19


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

March 30, 2004, respectively, in cash. The Company purchased a business of Footwork Logistics Corporation in line with its plans to expand its corporate rehabilitation business in Japan. In fiscal 2004, the Company included the balance sheet of Footwork Express Co., Ltd. as of December 31, 2003, the date of latest available financial statements, in the accompanying consolidated financial statements.

 

The fair values of the net assets acquired from this acquisition at the date of acquisition were as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

Intangible assets other than goodwill

   ¥ 2,225

Other assets

     887
    

Total assets acquired

     3,112
    

Net assets acquired

   ¥ 3,112
    

 

Of the ¥2,225 million of acquired intangible assets other than goodwill, ¥1,343 million was assigned to trade name that has an indefinite useful life and ¥614 million was assigned to a customer base that has an amortization period of 20 years and ¥268 million was assigned to a business license that has an amortization period of a half year. Furthermore, there is a possibility that additional payments may have to be made up to the fiscal 2007, depending upon the level of net income attained as stipulated in the business transfer contract. In this case, additional payments will be accounted for as an adjustment to the purchase price.

 

Furthermore, the Company’s share in Footwork Express Co., Ltd. was reduced in December 2004 due to an increase in capital whereby the substantive participating rights of a minority shareholder were increased. As a result, the Company no longer has a controlling financial interest in Footwork Express Co., Ltd. and included this company in investment in affiliates on the consolidated balance sheet as of March 31, 2005.

 

The 12 months operating results of Footwork Express Co., Ltd. have been included in the consolidated statement of income in fiscal 2005 based on its calendar reporting year ended December 31, 2004 and are reported in the income statement as “transportation revenues” and “costs of transportation revenues”. As a result of the reduction in the Company’s ownership interest in Footwork Express Co., Ltd., the Company will prospectively record its proportionate share of net income or loss of Footwork Express Co., Ltd. by the equity method.

 

During fiscal 2004, the Company and its subsidiaries acquired five other entities for a total cost of ¥10,658 million, which was paid in cash. Goodwill, which is not deductible for income tax calculation purposes, recognized in these transactions amounted to ¥1,230 million as a result of preliminary purchase price allocation at the time of acquisition, which was then adjusted to ¥398 million in accordance with the finalization of purchase price allocation during fiscal 2005. Acquisitions were made in line with the Company’s plans to expand real estate operations, automobile operations and corporate rehabilitation business in Japan.

 

During fiscal 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries acquired 10 entities for a total cost of ¥18,131 million ($169 million), which was paid in cash. Goodwill recognized in these transactions amounted to ¥2,330 million ($22 million), which is not deductible for income tax calculation purposes. Acquired intangible assets with an indefinite useful life other than goodwill recognized in these transactions amounted to ¥1,461 million ($14 million), which consist of ¥1,400 million ($13 million) for a business model of a cash collection system and ¥61 million ($1 million) for a trade name. The Company reflected certain preliminary estimates with respect to the value of the underlying net assets of these entities in determining amounts of the goodwill. Thus, the amount of the goodwill may be adjusted upon completion of the purchase price allocation. Acquisitions were made in line

 

F-20


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

with the Company’s plans to expand corporate financial services operations, real estate operations and corporate rehabilitation business in Japan.

 

The segment in which goodwill is allocated is disclosed in Note 12 “Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets”.

 

3. Cash Flow Information

 

Cash payments and non-cash financing activities during fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Cash payments:

                           

Interest

   ¥ 74,885    ¥ 60,951    ¥ 57,613    $ 536

Income taxes

     25,641      56,364      63,613      592

Non-cash financing activities:

                           

Conversion of convertible bond

     —        —        39,999      372

 

4. Investment in Direct Financing Leases

 

Investment in direct financing leases at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 

Minimum lease payments receivable

   ¥ 1,510,856     ¥ 1,500,483     $ 13,972  

Estimated residual value

     84,582       91,990       857  

Initial direct costs

     21,379       17,565       164  

Unearned lease income

     (163,242 )     (158,464 )     (1,476 )
    


 


 


     ¥ 1,453,575     ¥ 1,451,574     $ 13,517  
    


 


 


 

In connection with the securitization of direct financing lease receivables, as described in Note 9, the Company and its subsidiaries retained subordinated interests of ¥50,072 million and ¥66,299 million ($617 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively, and furthermore a certain subsidiary retained senior interests of ¥35,199 million ($328 million) as of March 31, 2005, which are included in investment in the above table.

 

Minimum lease payments receivable (including guaranteed residual values and, senior and subordinated interests retained) are due in periodic installments through 2025. At March 31, 2005, the amounts due in each of the next five years and thereafter are as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 538,342    $ 5,013

2007

     375,301      3,495

2008

     260,970      2,430

2009

     176,424      1,643

2010

     80,994      754

Thereafter

     68,452      637
    

  

Total

   ¥ 1,500,483    $ 13,972
    

  

 

Gains and losses from the disposition of direct financing lease assets are not significant for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005.

 

F-21


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

5. Investment in Operating Leases

 

Investment in operating leases at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 

Transportation equipment

   ¥ 320,973     ¥ 376,595     $ 3,507  

Measuring equipment and personal computers

     157,717       156,171       1,454  

Real estate and other

     290,037       337,270       3,141  
    


 


 


       768,727       870,036       8,102  

Accumulated depreciation

     (249,007 )     (265,022 )     (2,468 )
    


 


 


Net

     519,720       605,014       5,634  

Rental receivables

     16,982       13,991       130  
    


 


 


     ¥ 536,702     ¥ 619,005     $ 5,764  
    


 


 


 

Gains/losses from disposition of real estate under operating lease assets are disclosed separately as gains on sales of real estate under operating leases and discontinued operations, respectively, in the accompanying consolidated statements of income.

 

For fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, gains from the disposition of assets under operating leases other than real estate are ¥4,424 million, ¥2,783 million and ¥4,746 million ($44 million), respectively, and are included in operating lease revenues.

 

Costs of operating leases include depreciation and various expenses (insurance, property tax and other). Costs of depreciation and various expenses for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Depreciation

   ¥ 79,306    ¥ 82,987    ¥ 87,087    $ 811

Various expenses

     38,056      37,579      37,571      350
    

  

  

  

     ¥ 117,362    ¥ 120,566    ¥ 124,658    $ 1,161
    

  

  

  

 

The operating lease contracts include non-cancelable lease terms ranging from one month to 21 years. The minimum future rentals on non-cancelable operating leases are as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 80,631    $ 751

2007

     47,913      446

2008

     30,734      286

2009

     17,763      165

2010

     9,306      87

Thereafter

     19,596      183
    

  

Total

   ¥ 205,943    $ 1,918
    

  

 

F-22


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

6. Installment Loans

 

The composition of installment loans by domicile and type of borrower at March 31, 2004 and 2005 is as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Borrowers in Japan:

                    

Consumer—

                    

Housing loans

   ¥ 504,386    ¥ 507,250    $ 4,723

Card loans

     247,598      228,505      2,128

Other

     54,634      75,353      702
    

  

  

       806,618      811,108      7,553
    

  

  

Corporate—

                    

Real estate related companies

     310,847      369,083      3,437

Commercial and industrial companies

     850,539      960,500      8,944
    

  

  

       1,161,386      1,329,583      12,381
    

  

  

       1,968,004      2,140,691      19,934

Overseas corporate, industrial and other borrowers

     250,460      233,263      2,172

Loan origination costs, net

     16,476      12,643      118
    

  

  

     ¥ 2,234,940    ¥ 2,386,597    $ 22,224
    

  

  

 

Generally, all installment loans, except card loans, are made under agreements which require the borrower to provide collateral or guarantors.

 

At March 31, 2005, the contractual maturities of installment loans for each of the next five years and thereafter are as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 599,783    $ 5,585

2007

     290,601      2,706

2008

     276,705      2,577

2009

     205,688      1,915

2010

     242,247      2,256

Thereafter

     758,930      7,067
    

  

Total

   ¥ 2,373,954    $ 22,106
    

  

 

Included in interest on loans and investment securities in the consolidated statements of income is interest income on loans of ¥115,610 million, ¥107,490 million and ¥125,898 million ($1,172 million) for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

7. Allowance for Doubtful Receivables on Direct Financing Leases and Probable Loan Losses

 

Changes in the allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Beginning balance

   ¥ 152,887     ¥ 133,146     ¥ 128,020     $ 1,192  

Provisions charged to income

     54,706       49,592       39,574       369  

Charge-offs

     (78,744 )     (54,471 )     (54,122 )     (504 )

Recoveries

     2,180       1,892       1,472       13  

Other*

     2,117       (2,139 )     306       3  
    


 


 


 


Ending balance

   ¥ 133,146     ¥ 128,020     ¥ 115,250     $ 1,073  
    


 


 


 



* Other includes foreign currency translation adjustments and the effect of acquisitions.

 

The balance of the allowance broken down into investment in direct financing leases and installment loans at March 31, 2004 and 2005 is as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Balance of allowance related to:

                    

Investment in direct financing leases

   ¥ 41,008    ¥ 36,264    $ 338

Installment loans

     87,012      78,986      735
    

  

  

Total

   ¥ 128,020    ¥ 115,250    $ 1,073
    

  

  

 

Under FASB Statement No. 114 (“Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan”), impaired loans shall be measured based on the present value of expected future cash flows discounted at the loan’s original effective interest rate. As a practical expedient, impairment is measured based on the loan’s observable market price or the fair value of the collateral if the loan is collateral dependent. Certain loans, such as large groups of smaller-balance homogeneous loans (these include individual housing loans and card loans which are not restructured) and lease receivables, are collectively evaluated for impairment. When the measure of the impaired loan is less than the recorded investment in the loan, the impairment is recorded through a valuation allowance.

 

The recorded investments in loans considered impaired are ¥93,542 million and ¥86,021 million ($801 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Of these amounts, it was determined that a valuation allowance was required with respect to loans which had outstanding balances of ¥72,033 million and ¥67,745 million ($631 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. For such loans, the Company and its subsidiaries recorded a valuation allowance of ¥39,187 million and ¥35,150 million ($327 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. This valuation allowance is included in the allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets.

 

The average recorded investments in impaired loans for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 were ¥102,413 million and ¥94,346 million, ¥91,782 million ($855 million), respectively.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries recognized interest income on impaired loans of ¥1,107 million, ¥990 million and ¥1,790 million ($17 million), and collected in cash interest on impaired loans of ¥914 million, ¥954 million and ¥1,613 million ($15 million) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

F-24


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The Company and its subsidiaries use 90 days for suspending recognition of income from direct financing leases and loans, however, the Company and its subsidiaries used 180 days prior to fiscal 2003. (see Note 1(e))

 

As of March 31, 2004 and 2005, the balances of direct financing leases on non-accrual status were ¥36,568 million and ¥25,733 million ($240 million), and the balances of smaller-balance homogeneous loans on non-accrual status were ¥43,176 million and ¥26,945 million ($251 million), respectively.

 

8. Investment in Securities

 

Investment in securities at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Trading securities

   ¥ 26,354    ¥ 47,784    $ 445

Available-for-sale securities

     386,797      390,542      3,637

Other securities

     138,777      150,945      1,405
    

  

  

Total

   ¥ 551,928    ¥ 589,271    $ 5,487
    

  

  

 

Gains and losses realized from the sale of trading securities and net unrealized holding gains or losses on trading securities are included in gains on investment securities, net (see Note 20).

 

For fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, net unrealized holding gains and losses on trading securities are losses of ¥1,610 million, gains of ¥1,977million and losses of ¥764 million ($7 million), respectively.

 

During fiscal 2003 and 2004, the Company and its subsidiaries sold available-for-sale securities for aggregate proceeds of ¥264,021 million and ¥164,860 million, respectively, resulting in gross realized gains of ¥9,822 million and ¥10,910 million, respectively, and gross realized losses of ¥2,234 million and ¥2,182 million, respectively. During fiscal 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries sold available-for-sale securities for aggregate proceeds of ¥158,740 million ($1,478 million), resulting in gross realized gains of ¥23,036 million ($215 million) and gross realized losses of ¥1,747 million ($16 million). The cost of the securities sold was based on the average cost of each such security held at the time of the sale.

 

During fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries charged losses on securities of ¥14,325 million, ¥5,240 million and ¥4,930 million ($46 million), respectively, to the accompanying consolidated statements of income for declines in market value of securities where the decline was considered as other than temporary.

 

Other securities consist mainly of non-marketable equity securities, preferred capital shares carried at cost and investment funds accounted for under the equity method.

 

The aggregate carrying amount of other securities accounted for under the cost method totaled ¥79,516 million ($740 million) at March 31, 2005. Investments with an aggregate cost of ¥76,920 million ($716 million) were not evaluated for impairment because the Company and its subsidiaries did not estimate the fair value of those investments as it was not practicable to estimate the fair value of the investment and the Company and its subsidiaries did not identify any events or changes in circumstances that might have had significant adverse effect on the fair value of those investments.

 

F-25


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The amortized cost basis amounts, gross unrealized holding gains, gross unrealized holding losses and fair values of available-for-sale securities in each major security type at March 31, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

March 31, 2004                             
     Millions of yen

     Amortized cost

   Gross
unrealized
gains


   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

Available-for-sale:

                            

Japanese and foreign government bond securities

   ¥ 14,520    ¥ 87    ¥ (146 )   ¥ 14,461

Japanese prefectural and foreign municipal bond securities

     16,761      20      (115 )     16,666

Corporate debt securities

     174,398      2,524      (2,977 )     173,945

Mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities

     124,398      5,169      (3,387 )     126,180

Equity securities

     17,562      39,030      (1,047 )     55,545
    

  

  


 

     ¥ 347,639    ¥ 46,830    ¥ (7,672 )   ¥ 386,797
    

  

  


 

 

March 31, 2005                             
     Millions of yen

     Amortized cost

   Gross
unrealized
gains


   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

Available-for-sale:

                            

Japanese and foreign government bond securities

   ¥ 4,498    ¥ 78    ¥ (215 )   ¥ 4,361

Japanese prefectural and foreign municipal bond securities

     16,941      68      (138 )     16,871

Corporate debt securities

     238,096      2,159      (1,332 )     238,923

Mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities

     65,192      13,460      (2,314 )     76,338

Equity securities

     18,912      35,862      (725 )     54,049
    

  

  


 

     ¥ 343,639    ¥ 51,627    ¥ (4,724 )   ¥ 390,542
    

  

  


 

March 31, 2005                             
     Millions of yen

     Amortized cost

   Gross
unrealized
gains


   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

Available-for-sale:

                            

Japanese and foreign government bond securities

   $ 42    $ 1    $ (2 )   $ 41

Japanese prefectural and foreign municipal bond securities

     158      1      (1 )     158

Corporate debt securities

     2,217      20      (13 )     2,224

Mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities

     607      125      (22 )     710

Equity securities

     176      334      (6 )     504
    

  

  


 

     $ 3,200    $ 481    $ (44 )   $ 3,637
    

  

  


 

 

F-26


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The following table provides information about available-for-sale securities with gross unrealized losses and the length of time that individual securities have been in a continuous unrealized loss position as of March 31, 2005:

 

     Millions of yen

 
     Less than 12 months

    12 months or more

    Total

 
     Fair value

   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

   Gross
unrealized
losses


 

Japanese and foreign government bond securities

   ¥ 25    ¥ —       ¥ 1,062    ¥ (215 )   ¥ 1,087    ¥ (215 )

Japanese prefectural and foreign municipal bond securities

     102      —         1,040      (138 )     1,142      (138 )

Corporate debt securities

     16,719      (180 )     14,812      (1,152 )     31,531      (1,332 )

Mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities

     2,006      (644 )     852      (1,670 )     2,858      (2,314 )

Equity securities

     2,950      (644 )     1,077      (81 )     4,027      (725 )
    

  


 

  


 

  


     ¥ 21,802    ¥ (1,468 )   ¥ 18,843    ¥ (3,256 )   ¥ 40,645    ¥ (4,724 )
    

  


 

  


 

  


     Millions of U.S. dollars

 
     Less than 12 months

    12 months or more

    Total

 
     Fair value

   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

   Gross
unrealized
losses


    Fair value

   Gross
unrealized
losses


 

Japanese and foreign government bond securities

   $ 0    $ —       $ 10    $ (2 )   $ 10    $ (2 )

Japanese prefectural and foreign municipal bond securities

     1      —         10      (1 )     11      (1 )

Corporate debt securities

     156      (1 )     138      (11 )     294      (12 )

Mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities

     19      (6 )     7      (16 )     26      (22 )

Equity securities

     27      (6 )     10      (1 )     37      (7 )
    

  


 

  


 

  


     $ 203    $ (13 )   $ 175    $ (31 )   $ 378    $ (44 )
    

  


 

  


 

  


 

Approximately 100 investment positions, which included mainly foreign corporate securities and commercial mortgage-backed securities, were in an unrealized loss position as of March 31, 2005. The gross unrealized losses on these securities are attributable to a number of factors including changes in interest rates and credit spreads and market trends. As part of its ongoing monitoring process, management has concluded that none of these securities were other-than-temporarily impaired at March 31, 2005. The Company and its subsidiaries have the ability and intent to hold these securities for a time sufficient to recover its amortized cost.

 

F-27


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The following is a summary of the contractual maturities of debt securities classified as available-for-sale securities held at March 31, 2005:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of U.S. dollars

     Amortized
cost


   Fair value

   Amortized
cost


   Fair value

Due within one year

   ¥ 44,831    ¥ 44,981    $ 417    $ 419

Due after one to five years

     156,995      158,276      1,462      1,474

Due after five to ten years

     83,115      86,440      774      805

Due after ten years

     39,786      46,796      371      435
    

  

  

  

     ¥ 324,727    ¥ 336,493    $ 3,024    $ 3,133
    

  

  

  

 

Securities not due at a single maturity date, such as mortgage-backed securities, are included in the above table based on their final maturities.

 

Certain borrowers may have the right to call or prepay obligations. This right may cause actual maturities to differ from the contractual maturities summarized above.

 

Included in interest on loans and investment securities in the consolidated statements of income is interest income on investment securities of ¥15,980 million, ¥9,254 million and ¥10,137 million ($95 million) for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

9. Securitization Transactions

 

During fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries sold direct financing lease receivables, installment loans and investment in securities in securitization transactions. Certain information with respect to these transactions is as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Direct financing leases:

                           

Balance sold

   ¥ 150,956    ¥ 26,284    ¥ 97,177    $ 905

Gains on sales

     3,205      170      3,877      36

Interests retained

     25,388      —        66,024      615

Installment loans:

                           

Balance sold

     78,674      9,250      58,184      542

Gains on sales

     6,444      276      2,115      20

Interests retained

     32,850      263      9,562      89

Investment in securities:

                           

Balance sold

     —        —        24,760      231

Gains on sales

     —        —        6,528      61

Interests retained

     —        —        37,931      353

 

Regarding securitizations of direct financing lease receivables, for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, revenues from retained interests of ¥12,348 million, ¥9,542 million and ¥5,640 million ($53 million), respectively, are included in revenues from direct financing leases in the consolidated statements of income. Regarding securitizations of installment loans, revenues from retained interests of ¥7,075 million, ¥12,175 million and ¥13,371 million ($125 million) for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively, are included in interest on loans and investment securities in the consolidated statements of income.

 

F-28


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The value of retained interests is subject to credit risk, interest rate risk and prepayment risk on the securitized financial assets. The investors and special-purpose entities have no recourse to the Company or its subsidiaries’ other assets for failure of debtors to pay.

 

As of March 31, 2003, 2004 and 2005, there were no significant servicing assets and liabilities related to the Company and its subsidiaries’ securitization transactions.

 

Economic assumptions used in measuring the retained interests related to securitization transactions completed during fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

    2003

  2004

  2005

        Installment loans

      Installment
loans


      Installment loans

   
   

Direct

financing

leases


  Card loans

 

Mortgage

loans (1)


  Direct
financing
leases


  Commercial
mortgage
loans


 

Direct
financing

leases


  Commercial
mortgage
loans


  Housing
loans


  Investment in
securities


Expected credit loss

  0.03%-1.70%   0.84%-1.42%   0.69%   0.01%   2.39%   0.97%-1.19%   0.27%-1.59%   1.05%   0.00%

Discount rate

  2.35%-5.36%   1.26%-1.35%   0.68%-2.11%   8.35%   1.79%   0.37%-5.01%   0.49%-2.12%   1.04%-3.46%   6.64%-14.28%

Annual prepayment rate (2)

  —     —     5.95%   —     19.18%   0.20%-4.39%   19.03%-43.93%   7.52%   0.00%

(1) Mortgage loans contain commercial mortgage loans and housing loans.
(2) With respect to direct financing leases securitized in fiscal 2003 and 2004 and card loans securitized in fiscal 2003, the Company and its subsidiaries did not make separate assumptions for prepayment rates but considered the effect of prepayments in estimating discount rates or principal payments.

 

Retained interests from securitization transactions in fiscal 2005 and prior years are recorded in the consolidated balance sheets at March 31, 2005. Key economic assumptions used in measuring the fair value of retained interests as of March 31, 2005, and the impacts of 10% and 20% adverse changes to the assumptions on the fair value are as follows:

 

     2005

         Installment loans

   
     Direct financing
leases


  Card loans

  Commercial
mortgage loans


  Housing loans

  Investment in
securities


Expected credit loss

   0.84%-1.35%   2.53%-3.16%   0.27%-4.05%   1.06%   0.00%

Discount rate

   0.37%-8.90%   1.14%-1.58%   0.52%-2.21%   1.26%-3.29%   6.64%-14.28%

Annual prepayment rate (3)

   0.20%-4.39%   —     20.41%-43.35%   6.99%   0.00%

(3) With respect to card loans, a certain subsidiary did not make separate assumptions for prepayment rates but considered the effect of prepayments in estimating principal payments.

 

F-29


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

    Millions of yen

  Millions of U.S. dollars

        Installment loans

          Installment loans

   
    Direct
financing
leases


  Card loans

  Commercial
mortgage
loans


  Housing
loans


 

Investment

in securities


  Direct
financing
leases


  Card loans

  Commercial
mortgage
loans


  Housing
loans


 

Investment

in securities


Fair value of retained interests

  ¥ 112,426   ¥ 60,245   ¥ 6,419   ¥ 9,513   ¥ 46,788   $ 1,047   $ 561   $ 60   $ 89   $ 436

Weighted average life (in years)

    1.6-5.1     —       2.7     9.9     6.9-7.3     1.6-5.1     —       2.7     9.9     6.9-7.3

Expected credit loss:

                                                           

+10%

    552     497     7     37     —       5     5     0     0     —  

+20%

    1,102     992     14     73     —       10     9     0     1     —  

Discount rate:

                                                           

+10%

    405     134     10     81     249     4     1     0     1     2

+20%

    804     268     19     161     469     7     2     0     1     4

Prepayment rate:

                                                           

+10%

    37     —       122     147     —       0     —       1     1     —  

+20%

    73     —       231     286     —       1     —       2     3     —  

 

These sensitivities are hypothetical and should be used with caution. As the amounts indicate, changes in fair value based on a 10% variation in assumptions generally cannot be extrapolated because the relationship of the change in assumption to the change in fair value may not be linear. Also, in the above table, the effect of a variation in a particular assumption on the fair value of the retained interest is calculated without changing any other assumption; in reality, changes in one factor may result in changes in another, which might magnify or counteract the sensitivities.

 

Certain cash flows received from/(paid) to special-purpose entities for all securitization activities in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are summarized as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Proceeds from new securitizations

   ¥ 239,050     ¥ 35,704     ¥ 191,976     $ 1,788  

Servicing fees received

     470       551       274       3  

Cash flows received on interests retained

     21,201       31,742       31,403       292  

Repurchases of ineligible assets

     (26,122 )     (23,647 )     (24,215 )     (225 )

 

F-30


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Quantitative information about delinquencies, net credit losses, and components of financial assets sold on securitization and other assets managed together in fiscal 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

March 31, 2004                      
     Millions of yen

     Total principal
amount of
receivables


    Principal
amount of
receivables
more than 90
days past-due
and impaired
loans


   Net credit
losses


Types of assets:

                     

Direct financing leases

   ¥ 1,633,875     ¥ 36,568    ¥ 13,921

Installment loans

     2,374,449       136,718      38,658
    


 

  

Total assets managed or sold on securitization

     4,008,324     ¥ 173,286    ¥ 52,579
            

  

Less: assets sold on securitization

     (319,809 )             
    


            

Assets held in portfolio

   ¥ 3,688,515               
    


            

 

The total assets sold on securitization, as of March 31, 2004, are ¥339,943 million, but the assets of ¥20,134 million, of which the Company and certain subsidiaries only continuing involvement is the servicing, are not included in the table above.

 

March 31, 2005                                            
     Millions of yen

   Millions of dollars

     Total principal
amount of
receivables


    Principal
amount of
receivables more
than 90 days
past-due and
impaired loans


   Net credit
losses


   Total principal
amount of
receivables


    Principal
amount of
receivables more
than 90 days
past-due and
impaired loans


   Net credit
losses


Types of assets:

                                           

Direct financing leases

   ¥ 1,594,888     ¥ 25,733    ¥ 10,678    $ 14,851     $ 240    $ 99

Installment loans

     2,557,892       112,966      41,972      23,819       1,052      391
    


 

  

  


 

  

Total assets managed or sold on securitization

   ¥ 4,152,780     ¥ 138,699    ¥ 52,650    $ 38,670     $ 1,292    $ 490
            

  

          

  

Less: assets sold on securitization

     (314,609 )                   (2,930 )             
    


               


            

Assets held in portfolio

   ¥ 3,838,171                   $ 35,740               
    


               


            

 

The total assets of direct finance leases and installment loans sold on securitization, as of March 31, 2005, are ¥351,200 million ($3,270 million), but the assets of ¥36,591 million ($341 million), of which the Company and certain subsidiaries’ only continuing involvement is the servicing, are not included in the table above.

 

A subsidiary entered into a collateralized debt obligation transaction in fiscal 2005 and accounted for the transaction as a sale. The assets sold as a result of the transaction were ¥24,760 million ($231 million) as of March 31, 2005, and were not included in the table above.

 

F-31


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

In fiscal 2005 and prior years, the Company and its subsidiaries entered into other lease receivable securitization programs and other installment loan securitization programs that are not accounted for as sales but for as secured borrowings. The payables under these securitization programs of ¥97,707 million and ¥60,281 million ($561 million) are included in long-term debt. The collateral under these securitization programs of ¥116,289 million and ¥85,924 million ($800 million), of ¥22,869 million and ¥9,049 million ($84 million), and cash collateral of ¥2,911 million and ¥5,457 million ($51 million) are included in investment in direct financing leases, installment loans and other assets in the consolidated balance sheets as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

10. Business Transactions with Special Purpose Entities

 

The Company and its subsidiaries use special purpose companies, partnerships and trusts (hereinafter referred to as SPEs) in the ordinary course of business. These SPEs are not always accompanied by and are not generally controlled by voting rights. FASB Interpretation No. 46 (revised December 2003) (“Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities”) was first issued in January 2003, and effective March 31, 2003, for the SPEs created after January 31, 2003. In December 2003, the revised FASB Interpretation No. 46 (“FIN 46(R)”) was issued, and all SPEs were tested for consolidation in accordance with FIN 46(R). FIN 46(R) addresses consolidation by business enterprises of SPEs within the scope of the interpretation. Generally these SPEs are entities where a) the total equity investment at risk is not sufficient to permit the entity to finance its activities without additional subordinated financial support provided by any parties including the equity holders or b) as a group the holders of the equity investment at risk do not have (1) the direct or indirect ability to make decisions about an entity’s activities through voting rights or similar rights, or (2) the obligation to absorb the expected losses of the entity or (3) the right to receive the expected residual returns of the entity. There are certain exceptions to these general criteria. Entities within the scope of the Interpretation are called variable interest entities (“VIEs”). The variable interest holder who will absorb a majority of the expected losses or receive a majority of the expected residual returns or both is defined as the primary beneficiary of the entity. VIEs are consolidated by the primary beneficiary of the entity.

 

Information about significant SPEs for the Company and its subsidiaries are as follows:

 

(a) SPEs for liquidating customer assets

 

The Company and its subsidiaries may use SPEs in structuring financing for customers to liquidate specific customer assets. The SPEs are typically used to provide a structure that is bankruptcy remote with respect to the customer and the use of SPEs structure is requested by such customer. Such SPEs typically acquire assets to be liquidated from the customer, borrow non-recourse loans from financial institutions and have an equity investment made by the customer. By using cash flows from the liquidated assets, these SPEs repay the loan and pay dividends to equity investors if sufficient funds exist.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries provide installment loans to such SPEs in the aggregate of ¥16,197 million and ¥12,624 million ($118 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, and occasionally make investments in these SPEs, which amount to ¥15,937 million and ¥16,498 million ($154 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The Company and its subsidiaries’ risk exposure is limited to the amounts of the loans and investments referred to above.

 

Total assets of such SPEs are ¥201,841 million and ¥189,173 million ($1,762 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Among those SPEs, no SPEs were subject to consolidation.

 

(b) SPEs for acquisition of real estate and real estate development projects for customers

 

Customers and the Company and its subsidiaries are involved with SPEs formed to acquire real estate and/or develop real estate projects. In each case, a customer establishes and makes an equity investment in an SPE that is designed to be bankruptcy remote from the customer. The SPEs acquire real estate and/or develop real estate projects.

 

F-32


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The Company and its subsidiaries provide non-recourse loans to SPEs in the aggregate of ¥12,683 million and ¥12,819 million ($119 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, and/or make investments in these SPEs, which amount to ¥4,840 million and ¥9,795 million ($91 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The Company and its subsidiaries’ risk exposure is limited to the amounts of the loans and investments referred to above.

 

Total assets of such SPEs are ¥34,296 million and ¥62,908 million ($586 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Among those SPEs, total assets of consolidation were ¥8,706 million and ¥15,923 million ($148 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Those assets are mainly included in inventories and investment in operating leases in the consolidated balance sheets.

 

The consolidated SPEs borrow from financial institutions, and ¥8,040 million and ¥12,138 million ($113 million) of the SPEs’ assets are pledged as collateral for the non-recourse loans as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The lenders of the non-recourse loans have no recourse to other assets of the Company and its subsidiaries.

 

(c) SPEs for acquisition of real estate for the Company and its subsidiaries’ real estate-related business

 

The Company and its subsidiaries acquire real estate and establish SPEs to simplify the administration activities necessary for the real estate. The Company and its subsidiaries have always consolidated such SPEs even though the Company and its subsidiaries may not have voting rights since substantially all of such SPEs’ subordinated interests are issued to the Company and its subsidiaries, and therefore controlled by and for the benefit of the Company and its subsidiaries.

 

Total assets of such SPEs are ¥48,809 million and ¥83,856 million ($781 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Those assets are mainly included in investment in operating leases and other operating assets in the consolidated balance sheets as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

Certain SPEs borrow non-recourse loans from financial institutions, and ¥11,041 million and ¥10,729 million ($100 million) of SPEs’ assets are pledged as collateral for the non-recourse loans as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The lenders of the non- recourse loans have no recourse to other assets of the Company and its subsidiaries.

 

(d) SPEs for corporate rehabilitation support business

 

Financial institutions, the Company and its subsidiary are involved with SPEs established for the corporate rehabilitation support business. SPEs receive the funds from investors including the financial institutions, the Company and the subsidiary and purchase loan receivables due from borrowers which have financial problems, but deemed to have the potential to recover in the future. The servicing operations for the SPEs are mainly conducted by the subsidiary.

 

The Company consolidated such SPEs since the Company and the subsidiary have the majority of the investment share of such SPEs.

 

Total assets of SPEs of consolidation are ¥25,991 million ($242 million) as of March 31, 2005. Those assets are mainly included in installment loans in the consolidated balance sheet as of March 31, 2005.

 

(e) Kumiai structures

 

In Japan, certain subsidiaries provide investment products to their customers that employ a contractual mechanism known as a kumiai, which in part result in the subsidiaries forming a type of SPE. As a means to

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

finance the purchase of aircraft or other large-ticket items to be leased to third parties, the Company and its subsidiaries arrange and market kumiai products to investors, who invest a portion of the funds necessary into the kumiai structure. The remainder of the purchase funds are borrowed by the kumiai structure in the form of a non-recourse loan from one or more financial institutions. The kumiai investors (and any lenders to the kumiai structure) retain all of the economic risks and rewards in connection with purchase and leasing activities of the kumiai structure, and all related gains or losses are recorded on the financial statements of investors in the kumiai. The Company and its subsidiaries are responsible for the arrangement and marketing of these products, and may act as servicer or administrator in kumiai transactions. The fee income for the arrangement and administration of these transactions is recognized in the consolidated financial statements. The Company and its subsidiaries do not guarantee or otherwise have any financial commitments or exposure with respect to the kumiai or its related SPE.

 

The Company has evaluated each of these structures pursuant to Interpretation No. 46(R) and has concluded that although the SPEs that are part of the kumiai structure are VIEs, the Company and its subsidiaries do not have the primary beneficial interest. As a result, these SPEs are not consolidated by the Company and its subsidiaries.

 

11. Investment in Affiliates

 

Investment in affiliates at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Common stock, at equity value

   ¥ 149,237    ¥ 264,669    $ 2,465

Loans

     7,959      9,817      91
    

  

  

     ¥ 157,196    ¥ 274,486    $ 2,556
    

  

  

 

Certain affiliates are listed on stock exchanges. The aggregate investment in and quoted market value of those affiliates amounted to ¥45,548 million and ¥51,884 million, respectively, as of March 31, 2004 and ¥76,495 million ($712 million) and ¥86,454 million ($805 million), respectively, as of March 31, 2005.

 

In fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries received dividends from affiliates of ¥2,060 million, ¥3,136 million and ¥5,453 million ($51 million), respectively.

 

The balance of excess of cost over the underlying equity at acquisition dates of investment in affiliates amounted to ¥31,189 million and ¥26,173 million ($244 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

On March 30, 2002, the Company acquired approximately a 22% interest in The Fuji Fire and Marine Insurance Company Limited (“Fuji”) for ¥18,105 million (As a result of increase of treasury stock, the share of interest became 25% as of March 31, 2005). Upon completion of valuation of Fuji’s assets and liabilities during fiscal 2003 it was determined that the fair value of Fuji’s assets and liabilities exceeded the purchase price paid. The excess remaining after first reducing non-current assets to zero was recorded as an extraordinary gain of ¥3,214 million, net of tax of ¥2,206 million, in fiscal 2003.

 

During fiscal 2003, the Company acquired an interest in two affiliates accounted for under the equity method for which the purchase price allocation was not complete as of March 31, 2003. Upon completion of valuation of investee assets and liabilities during fiscal 2004 it was determined that the fair value of investee assets and liabilities

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

exceeded the purchase price paid. This excess of fair value of the Company’s proportionate interest in the net assets of investees upon acquisition has been recorded first as a reduction of non-current assets of the investees with the excess reported as an extraordinary gain of ¥609 million, net of tax of ¥421 million, during fiscal 2004.

 

The Company formed a consortium with the Hanwha Group (a conglomerate or chaebol located in the Republic of Korea), and Macquarie Life Limited (a life insurance company located in Australia). The consortium entered into a stock purchase agreement (“Purchase Agreement”) with Korea Deposit Insurance Corporation, and acquired 51% of the outstanding shares of Korea Life Insurance Co., Ltd. (“KLI”) on December 12, 2002. Pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, the Company acquired 17% of the outstanding shares for approximately 275 billion Korean won (¥27,778 million). Since the Company, through the Consortium Agreement and the Shareholders Agreement, has the ability to influence the operations and the financial policies of KLI, the Company accounts for this investment by the equity method.

 

On June 11, 2002, ORIX JREIT Inc. (“ORIX JREIT”), a wholly-owned Japanese real estate investment corporation as of March 31, 2002, completed an initial public offering of its investment units, which had been previously issued by ORIX JREIT to the Company. Through this initial public offering, the Company as a unitholder sold to investors 80% or 98,700 units out of 123,372 units of the outstanding units of ORIX JREIT and recognized a ¥3,174 million gain included in other operating revenues in the accompanying consolidated statements of income in fiscal 2003. The Company received aggregate net cash proceeds from the sale of ¥49,528 million or ¥501,800 per unit.

 

Subsequent to the initial public offering, the Company accounted for the remaining investment in ORIX JREIT using the equity method of accounting. In addition, ORIX JREIT entered into an asset management agreement with one of the Company’s subsidiaries and paid ¥470 million of management fees from June 2002 to March 2003 for fiscal 2003, ¥847 million for fiscal 2004 and ¥915 million ($9 million) for fiscal 2005, respectively.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries sold office buildings under operating leases to ORIX JREIT and recognized ¥7,617 million of gains on the sales, which were included in gains on sales of real estate under operating leases in the accompanying consolidated statements of income for fiscal 2004. The related intercompany profits have been eliminated based on the Company’s proportionate share under the equity method. There were no sales of assets by the Company and its subsidiaries to ORIX JREIT for fiscal 2005.

 

During fiscal 2004, ORIX JREIT issued 52,000 units of ORIX JREIT to the public at an issue price of ¥ 463,873 per unit, receiving aggregate proceeds of ¥24,121 million. As a result of the issuance of new units, the ownership interest of the Company and its subsidiary in ORIX JREIT decreased from 21% to 15%. Because the issuance price per unit issued by ORIX JREIT was less than the average carrying amount per unit of the Company and the subsidiary, the Company and the subsidiary were required to adjust the carrying amounts of their investments in ORIX JREIT by ¥396 million and recognized losses in earnings. In addition, due to the sale of the Company and the subsidiary holding interest, the subsidiary has 10% interest as of March 31, 2005.

 

On March 25, 2005, the Company acquired approximately an additional 42% interest and certain preferred stock in DAIKYO INCORPORATED for ¥46,565 million ($434 million), for which the purchase price allocation was not completed as of March 31, 2005.

 

Companies comprising a significant portion of investment in affiliates are DAIKYO INCORPORATED (44% of equity share), Stockton Holdings Limited (27%), The Fuji Fire and Marine Insurance Company Limited (25%) and Korea Life Insurance Co., Ltd. (17%).

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Combined and condensed information relating to the affiliates accounted for by the equity method for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows (some operation data for entities reflect only the period since the Company made the investment and on the lag basis as described above):

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Operations:                            

Total revenues

   ¥ 378,761    ¥ 1,272,013    ¥ 1,470,624    $ 13,694

Income before income taxes

     44,887      111,109      148,636      1,384

Net income

     34,593      93,734      107,809      1,004
Financial position:                            

Total assets

   ¥ 5,307,035    ¥ 5,528,819    ¥ 6,960,937    $ 64,819

Total liabilities

     5,104,873      5,181,197      6,257,525      58,269

Shareholders’ equity

     202,162      347,622      703,412      6,550

 

The Company had no significant transactions with these companies except as described above.

 

12. Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets

 

Changes in goodwill by reportable segment for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

 
    

Corporate

financial

services


   

Automobile

operations


   

Equipment

operating

leases


  

Real estate

-related
finance


    Real estate

   

Life

insurance


   Other

   

The

Americas


   

Asia,

Oceania

and Europe


    Total

 

Balance at March 31, 2002

   ¥ 338     ¥ 746     ¥ —      ¥ (737 )   ¥ (171 )   ¥ 4,452    ¥ 167     ¥ 7,442     ¥ 2,926     ¥ 15,163  

Acquired

     256       15       —        3,002       —         —        54       —         71       3,398  

Impairment

     —         —         —        —         —         —        —         —         (274 )     (274 )

Other (net) (1)

     —         —         —        737       171       —        —         (705 )     20       223  
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


Current period change

     256       15       —        3,739       171       —        54       (705 )     (183 )     3,347  
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


Balance at March 31, 2003

     594       761       —        3,002       —         4,452      221       6,737       2,743       18,510  

Acquired

     —         832       —        —         —         —        398       —         —         1,230  

Impairment

     —         (464 )     —        —         —         —        —         —         —         (464 )

Other (net) (1)

     —         —         —        (693 )     —         —        (53 )     (964 )     18       (1,692 )
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


Current period change

     —         368       —        (693 )     —         —        345       (964 )     18       (926 )
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


Balance at March 31, 2004

     594       1,129       —        2,309       —         4,452      566       5,773       2,761       17,584  

Acquired

     440       —         —        —         237       —        1,653       —         —         2,330  

Impairment

     (251 )     —         —        —         —         —        —         —         —         (251 )

Other (net) (1)

     —         (848 )     —        —         —         —        (210 )     113       (417 )     (1,362 )
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


Current period change

     189       (848 )     —        —         237       —        1,443       113       (417 )     717  
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


Balance at March 31, 2005

   ¥ 783     ¥ 281     ¥ —      ¥ 2,309     ¥ 237     ¥ 4,452    ¥ 2,009     ¥ 5,886     ¥ 2,344     ¥ 18,301  
    


 


 

  


 


 

  


 


 


 


 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

     Millions of U.S. dollars

 
    

Corporate

financial

services


   

Automobile

operations


   

Equipment

operating

leases


  

Real estate

-related
finance


   Real estate

  

Life

insurance


   Other

   

The

Americas


  

Asia,

Oceania

and Europe


    Total

 

Balance at March 31, 2004

   $ 6     $ 11     $ —      $ 22    $ —      $ 41    $ 5     $ 54    $ 25     $ 164  

Acquired

     4       —         —        —        2      —        15       —        —         21  

Impairment

     (2 )     —         —        —        —        —        —         —        —         (2 )

Other (net) (1)

     —         (8 )     —        —        —        —        (2 )     1      (4 )     (13 )
    


 


 

  

  

  

  


 

  


 


Current period change

     2       (8 )     —        —        2      —        13       1      (4 )     6  
    


 


 

  

  

  

  


 

  


 


Balance at March 31, 2005

   $ 8     $ 3     $ —      $ 22    $ 2    $ 41    $ 18     $ 55    $ 21     $ 170  
    


 


 

  

  

  

  


 

  


 



(1) Other includes effect of an adoption of FASB Statement No. 141, foreign currency translation adjustments and certain other reclassifications.

 

Other intangible assets at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consist of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

   

Millions of

U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 

Intangible assets not subject to amortization

   ¥ 3,361     ¥ 4,598     $ 43  

Intangible assets subject to amortization:

                        

Software

     36,913       45,323       422  

Others

     8,455       8,459       79  
    


 


 


       45,368       53,782       501  

Accumulated amortization

     (21,399 )     (28,415 )     (265 )
    


 


 


Net

     23,969       25,367       236  
    


 


 


     ¥ 27,330     ¥ 29,965     $ 279  
    


 


 


 

The aggregate amortization expenses for the net carrying amount of intangible assets are ¥7,440 million, ¥7,603 million and ¥7,966 million ($74 million) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

The estimated amortization expenses for each of the five succeeding fiscal years are ¥7,126 million ($66 million) in fiscal 2006, ¥6,301 million ($59 million) in fiscal 2007, ¥4,693 million ($44 million) in fiscal 2008, ¥3,144 million ($29 million) in fiscal 2009 and ¥1,431 million ($13 million) in fiscal 2010, respectively.

 

13. Short-Term and Long-Term Debt

 

Short-term debt consists of notes payable to banks, bank overdrafts and commercial paper.

 

The composition of short-term debt and the weighted average interest rate on short-term debt at March 31, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

March 31, 2004

 

     Millions of yen

  

Weighted

average rate


 

Short-term debt in Japan, mainly from banks

   ¥ 241,746    1.5 %

Short-term debt outside Japan, mainly from banks

     241,890    2.7  

Commercial paper in Japan

     417,854    0.1  

Commercial paper outside Japan

     2,426    1.6  
    

      
     ¥ 903,916    1.2  
    

      

 

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Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

March 31, 2005

 

     Millions of yen

  

Millions of

U.S. dollars


  

Weighted

average rate


 

Short-term debt in Japan, mainly from banks

   ¥ 175,342      1,633    1.2 %

Short-term debt outside Japan, mainly from banks

     243,649      2,269    4.1  

Commercial paper in Japan

     528,046      4,917    0.1  

Commercial paper outside Japan

     834      7    1.5  
    

  

      
     ¥ 947,871    $ 8,826    1.3  
    

  

      

 

 

Long-term debt at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:

 

March 31, 2004

 

     Due

   Millions of yen

Banks:            

Fixed rate: 0.9% to 7.2%

   2005-2014    ¥ 124,031

Floating rate: principally based on LIBOR plus 0.2% to 0.8%

   2005-2021      790,947
Insurance companies and others:            

Fixed rate: 0.5% to 6.7%

   2005-2014      379,788

Floating rate: principally based on LIBOR plus 0.0% to 0.8%

   2005-2021      248,972

Unsecured 0.6% to 3.1% bonds

   2005-2013      744,113

Unsecured 0.0% to 0.4% convertible bonds

   2005-2007      68,473

Unsecured 0.6% to 1.6% bonds with warrants

   2005-2006      3,400

Unsecured 0.0% bond with stock acquisition rights

   2023      45,956

Unsecured 0.0% to 6.1% notes under medium-term note program

   2005-2013      159,332

0.4% to 3.0% payables under securitized lease receivables

   2006-2009      76,393

0.5% to 5.8% payables under securitized loan receivables

   2005-2010      21,314
         

          ¥ 2,662,719
         

 

March 31, 2005

 

     Due

   Millions of yen

  

Millions of

U.S. dollars


Banks:                   

Fixed rate: 0.6% to 7.5%

   2006-2020    ¥ 110,079    $ 1,025

Floating rate: principally based on LIBOR plus 0.0% to 0.8%

   2006-2021      1,030,897      9,600
Insurance companies and others:                   

Fixed rate: 0.5% to 6.6%

   2006-2014      392,386      3,654

Floating rate: principally based on LIBOR plus 0.0% to 0.6%

   2006-2021      257,590      2,399

Unsecured 0.6% to 3.1% bonds

   2006-2015      818,000      7,617

Unsecured 0.0% convertible bond

   2007      28,315      263

Unsecured 0.6% bond with warrants

   2006      1,600      15

Unsecured 0.0% bond with stock acquisition rights

   2023      48,940      456

Unsecured 0.0% to 7.0% notes under medium-term note program

   2006-2013      113,775      1,059

0.2% to 3.0% payables under securitized lease receivables

   2006-2009      48,875      455

0.8% to 5.8% payables under securitized loan receivables

   2006-2008      11,406      106
         

  

          ¥ 2,861,863    $ 26,649
         

  

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The repayment schedule for the next five years and thereafter for long-term debt at March 31, 2005 is as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 728,171    $ 6,781

2007

     574,171      5,346

2008

     473,966      4,413

2009

     389,689      3,629

2010

     394,977      3,678

Thereafter

     300,889      2,802
    

  

Total

   ¥ 2,861,863    $ 26,649
    

  

 

For borrowings from banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions, and for bonds, interest payments are usually paid semi-annually and principal repayments are made upon maturity of the loan contracts or bonds. For medium-term notes, interest payments are mainly made annually and principal is repaid upon maturity of the notes.

 

The Company issued a Euro yen convertible bond of ¥28,840 million (added premium of ¥840 million) in December 2001. This is currently convertible into approximately 1,892,000 shares of common stock at fixed conversion price of ¥14,800.00 per share. The conversion price shall be adjusted, if the Company issues new shares at less than the current market price of the shares.

 

The Company issued an unsecured Japanese yen bond with warrants. This bond was issued in conjunction with compensation plans that is described in Note 17. “Stock-Based Compensation.” This bond in the amount of ¥1,600 million (excluding value of warrants) was issued at par in July 2001.

 

The Company issued Liquid Yield Option Notes of $400 million, net of unamortized discount of $622 million, in June 2002. The bond has stock acquisition rights that are currently convertible into approximately 3,136,000 shares of common stock at a conversion price of $127.44 per share. The stock acquisition rights may be exercised (1) if the closing price at Tokyo Stock Exchange for the shares for at least 20 trading days in a period of 30 consecutive trading days ending on the last trading day of such quarter is more than specified conversion trigger price which will be accreted from $140.48 for the quarter including the date of issuance to $355.05 for the quarter ending the date of the bond maturity, (2) during any period in which the issuer rating or the long-term senior debt credit rating assigned to the Company is below a specified level, (3) if the bond is called for redemption or (4) if specified corporate transactions have occurred.

 

Total committed lines for the Company and its subsidiaries were ¥875,797 million and ¥895,805 million ($8,342 million) at March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively, and, of these lines, ¥765,608 million and ¥795,935 million ($7,412 million) were available at March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Of the available committed lines, ¥97,664 million and ¥85,427 million ($795 million) were long-term committed credit lines at March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

As of March 31, 2004 and 2005, ¥64,000 million and ¥118,250 million ($1,101 million) of the total committed lines were restricted for commercial paper backup purposes, and no borrowings were made under these lines at each balance sheet date.

 

Some of the debt and commitment contracts contain covenant clauses. The covenants include select objective requirements relating to the need for the Company and its subsidiaries to maintain prescribed levels of equity or credit rating issued by the rating agencies. As of March 31, 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries were in compliance with such objective covenant requirements.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The agreements related to debt payable to banks provide that the banks under certain circumstances may request additional security for loans and have the right to offset cash deposited against any short-term or long-term debt that becomes due and, in case of default and certain other specified events, against all other debt payable to the banks.

 

In addition to the minimum lease payments receivable related to the payables under securitized lease receivables described in Note 9. “Securitization Transactions,” and the real estate that SPEs described in Note 10 (b)(c). “Business Transactions with Special Purpose Entities” own, the short-term and long-term debt payable to financial institutions are secured by the following assets as of March 31, 2005:

 

     Millions of yen

  

Millions of

U.S. dollars


Minimum lease payments, loans and future rentals

   ¥ 47,566    $ 443

Investment in securities (include repurchase facilities of ¥68,605 million ($639 million))

     83,881      781

Other operating assets and office facilities, net

     9,502      88
    

  

     ¥ 140,949    $ 1,312
    

  

 

As of March 31, 2005, securities and other assets of ¥2,806 million ($26 million) were pledged for collateral security deposits.

 

As of March 31, 2005, a subsidiary pledged borrowed bonds through security lending transactions with the fair values of ¥22,173 million ($206 million) for collateral security deposits.

 

Under agreements with customers on brokerage business, a subsidiary received customers’ securities with an approximate value of ¥62,888 million ($586 million) as of March 31, 2005, that may be sold or repledged by the subsidiary. As of March 31, 2005, ¥33,524 million ($312 million) at market value of the securities are repledged as collateral for short-term debt.

 

Loan agreements relating to short-term and long-term debt from commercial banks and certain insurance companies provide that minimum lease payments and installment loans are subject to pledges as collateral against these debts at any time if requested by the lenders. To date, the Company has not received any such requests from the lenders.

 

14. Deposits

 

Deposits at March 31, 2004 and 2005 consist of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

  

Millions of

U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Time deposits

   ¥ 242,102    ¥ 282,250    $ 2,628

Other deposits

     50,443      54,338      506
    

  

  

Total

   ¥ 292,545    ¥ 336,588    $ 3,134
    

  

  

 

The balances of time deposits, including certificates of deposit, issued in amounts of ¥10 million ($93 thousand) or more were ¥159,873 million and ¥191,619 million ($1,784 million) at March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

F-40


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The maturity schedule of time deposits at March 31, 2005 is as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

  

Millions of

U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 118,426    $ 1,103

2007

     50,518      470

2008

     48,263      449

2009

     12,114      113

2010

     52,929      493
    

  

Total

   ¥ 282,250    $ 2,628
    

  

 

15. Income Taxes

 

Income before discontinued operations, extraordinary gain, cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle and income taxes, and the provision for income taxes in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

    2004

    2005

   2005

Income before discontinued operations, extraordinary gain, cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle and income taxes:

                             

Domestic

   ¥ 35,390     ¥ 79,372     ¥ 117,978    $ 1,098

Foreign

     9,996       22,582       36,369      339
    


 


 

  

     ¥ 45,386     ¥ 101,954     ¥ 154,347    $ 1,437
    


 


 

  

Provision for income taxes:                              
Current—                              

Domestic

   ¥ 43,152     ¥ 50,140     ¥ 47,138    $ 439

Foreign

     878       4,185       6,155      57
    


 


 

  

       44,030       54,325       53,293      496
    


 


 

  

Deferred—                              

Domestic

     (28,521 )     (11,733 )     4,160      39

Foreign

     5,299       8,852       11,373      106
    


 


 

  

       (23,222 )     (2,881 )     15,533      145
    


 


 

  

Provision for income taxes

   ¥ 20,808     ¥ 51,444     ¥ 68,826    $ 641
    


 


 

  

 

The Company and its domestic subsidiaries were subject to a National Corporate tax of 30%, an Inhabitant tax of approximately 6% and a deductible Enterprise tax of approximately 10%, which in the aggregate resulted in a statutory income tax rate of approximately 42% in fiscal 2003 and 2004. The Amendments to Local Tax Laws, which were enacted on March 31, 2003 (effective from April 1, 2004), decreased the statutory tax rate to approximately 40.7%. During fiscal 2004, the statutory tax rate increased to 40.9%, due to the tuning of tax rate by each local tax authority. In fiscal 2005, the Company and its domestic subsidiaries are subject to a National Corporate tax of 30%, an Inhabitant tax of approximately 6% and a deductible Enterprise tax of approximately 8%, which in the aggregate result in a statutory income tax rate of 40.9%.

 

F-41


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Reconciliation of the differences between tax provision computed at the statutory rate and consolidated provisions for income taxes in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   

Millions of

U.S. dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Income before discontinued operations, extraordinary gain, cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle and income taxes

   ¥ 45,386     ¥ 101,954     ¥ 154,347     $ 1,437  
    


 


 


 


Tax provision computed at statutory rate

   ¥ 19,062     ¥ 42,821     ¥ 63,128     $ 588  
Increases (reductions) in taxes due to:                                 

Change in valuation allowance

     2,597       1,019       (3,960 )     (37 )

Charge-off of deferred tax assets recognized for excess of the tax basis over the amounts for financial reporting of investments in subsidiaries

     —         5,586       —         —    

Non-deductible expenses for tax purposes

     1,013       744       1,009       9  

Effect of a change in tax rate

     (2,420 )     724       —         —    

Effect of lower tax rates on foreign subsidiaries and domestic life insurance subsidiary

     (705 )     (1,225 )     (1,327 )     (12 )

Effect of foreign subsidiaries undistributed earnings no longer permanently reinvested

     —         —         5,855       55  

Other, net

     1,261       1,775       4,121       38  
    


 


 


 


Provision for income taxes

   ¥ 20,808     ¥ 51,444     ¥ 68,826     $ 641  
    


 


 


 


 

The effective income tax rate is different from the statutory tax rate primarily because of certain non-deductible expenses for tax purposes, a change in valuation allowance and the effect of lower income tax rates on foreign subsidiaries and a domestic life insurance subsidiary.

 

Under the provisions of FASB Statement No. 109 (“Accounting for Income Taxes”), the effect of a change in tax laws or rates is included in income in the period the change is enacted and includes a cumulative recalculation of deferred tax balances based on the new tax laws or rates. As a result, the net deferred tax liability decreased ¥2,420 million, which decreased the provision for income taxes in fiscal 2003, and increased ¥724 million which increased the provision for income taxes in fiscal 2004.

 

In fiscal 2004, ¥5,586 million of deferred tax assets which had been recognized for excess of the tax basis over the amounts for financial reporting of investments in subsidiaries was written down; due to the change in the management’s future tax plan, the temporary differences for these deferred tax assets will no longer reverse in the foreseeable future and, accordingly, should no longer be recognized.

 

In fiscal 2005, a deferred tax liability of ¥5,855 million ($55 million) was recognized because the Company determined not to permanently reinvest undistributed earnings of certain foreign subsidiaries.

 

F-42


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Total income taxes recognized in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

  

Millions of

U.S. dollars


     2003

    2004

    2005

   2005

Provision for income taxes

   ¥ 20,808     ¥ 51,444     ¥ 68,826    $ 641

Income tax on discontinued operations

     388       2,015       4,062      38

Income tax on extraordinary gain

     2,206       421       —        —  

Income tax on cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle

     353       —         —        —  
Income tax on other comprehensive income (loss):                              

Net unrealized gains (losses) on investment in securities

     (7,046 )     15,179       7,564      70

Minimum pension liability adjustments

     1,986       (2,573 )     4,781      45

Foreign currency translation adjustments

     (835 )     (3,192 )     81      1

Net unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments

     (445 )     2,111       1,865      17
    


 


 

  

Total income taxes

   ¥ 17,415     ¥ 65,405     ¥ 87,179    $ 812
    


 


 

  

 

The tax effects of temporary differences giving rise to the deferred tax assets and liabilities at March 31, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   

Millions of

U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 
Assets:                         

Net operating loss carryforwards

   ¥ 14,325     ¥ 9,424     $ 88  

Allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses

     35,179       33,007       307  

Other operating assets

     3,703       3,703       35  

Accrued expenses

     11,219       9,176       85  

Other

     17,127       14,400       134  
    


 


 


       81,553       69,710       649  

Less: valuation allowance

     (13,908 )     (10,036 )     (93 )
    


 


 


       67,645       59,674       556  
     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 

Liabilities:

                        

Investment in direct financing leases

     101,647       84,203       784  

Investment in operating leases

     5,280       3,455       32  

Investment in securities

     17,214       22,143       206  

Deferred insurance policy acquisition costs

     11,640       11,468       107  

Policy liabilities

     4,040       8,765       82  

Undistributed earnings

     21,719       43,376       404  

Prepaid benefit cost

     10,937       12,161       113  

Other

     2,845       10,465       98  
    


 


 


       175,322       196,036       1,826  
    


 


 


Net deferred tax liability

   ¥ 107,677     ¥ 136,362     $ 1,270  
    


 


 


 

F-43


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Valuation allowance is mainly recognized for deferred tax assets of consolidated subsidiaries with net operating loss carryforwards for tax purposes. In assessing the realizability of deferred tax assets, management considers whether it is more likely than not that some portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be realized. The ultimate realization of deferred tax assets is dependent upon the generation of future taxable income during the periods in which those temporary differences become deductible and tax loss carryforwards are utilizable. Management considers the scheduled reversal of deferred tax liabilities, projected future taxable income, and tax planning strategies in making this assessment. Based upon the level of historical taxable income and projections for future taxable income over the periods in which the deferred tax assets are deductible, management believes it is more likely than not that the Company and its subsidiaries will realize the benefits of these deductible temporary differences and tax loss carryforwards, net of the existing valuation allowances at March 31, 2005. The amount of the deferred tax asset considered realizable, however, could be reduced in the near term if estimates of future taxable income during the carryforward period are reduced. The net changes in the total valuation allowance were increases of ¥2,412 million and ¥763 million in fiscal 2003 and 2004 and a decrease of ¥3,872 million ($36 million) in fiscal 2005, respectively. As of March 31, 2005, a deferred tax liability has not been recognized for ¥72,779 million ($678 million) of undistributed earnings of foreign subsidiaries where the Company intends to reinvest permanently. The deferred tax liability will be recognized when the Company is no longer able to demonstrate that it plans to permanently reinvest undistributed earnings.

 

Certain subsidiaries have net operating loss carryforwards of ¥40,180 million ($374 million) at March 31, 2005, which expire as follows:

 

Year ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 791    $ 7

2007

     1,132      11

2008

     914      9

2009

     1,023      10

2010

     145      1

Thereafter

     36,175      336
    

  

Total

   ¥ 40,180    $ 374
    

  

 

Net deferred tax assets and liabilities at March 31, 2004 and 2005 are reflected in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets under the following captions:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Other assets

   ¥ 14,557    ¥ 19,245    $ 179

Income taxes: deferred

     122,234      155,607      1,449
    

  

  

Net deferred tax liability

   ¥ 107,677    ¥ 136,362    $ 1,270
    

  

  

 

16. Pension Plans

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries have trusted contributory and non-contributory funded pension plans covering substantially all of their employees. Those trusted contributory funded pension plans include defined benefit pension plans and defined contribution pension plans. Under the plans, employees are entitled to lump-sum payments at the time of termination of their employment or to pension payments. The amounts of such payments are determined on the basis of length of service and remuneration at the time of termination in some defined benefit pension plans.

 

F-44


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The Company had tax qualified pension plan in which the benefit was determined on the basis of length of service and remuneration at the time of termination. However, effective July 1, 2004, the Company amended its tax qualified pension plan to a cash balance pension plan and a defined contribution pension plan. The cash balance plan is regarded as a defined benefit pension plan and under the cash balance pension plan, each participant has an account, which is calculated yearly based on the current rate of pay, job title, job class and market-related interest rate.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries’ funding policy is to contribute annually the amounts actuarially determined. Assets of the plans are invested primarily in interest-bearing securities and marketable equity securities.

 

In June 2001, the Japanese pension law was amended to permit an employer to elect to transfer the entire substitutional portion of benefit obligation from the employees’ pension fund (“EPF”) to the government together with a specified amount of plan assets determined pursuant to a government formula. In fiscal 2004, the Company and certain subsidiaries received government approval of exemption from the obligation for benefits related to future employee service with respect to the substitutional portion of its EPF. In fiscal 2005, the Company and certain subsidiaries received government approval of exemption from the obligation for benefits related to past employee service with respect to the substitutional portion of its EPF and transferred the benefit obligation of the substitutional portion as well as the related government-specified portion of plan assets of the EPF to the government. As a result of the completion of the transfer, the Company and certain subsidiaries recognized: a gain on a subsidy from the government of ¥12,425 million ($115 million), a gain on the reversal of retirement benefit liabilities as a result of derecognition of previously accrued salary progression at the time of settlement for the substitutional portion of ¥2,618 million ($25 million), and a loss of ¥14,470 million ($135 million) to liquidate the plan, which mainly include amortization of unrecognized actuarial loss. The net impact of the above was a gain of ¥573 million ($5 million), which was recorded as a reduction in selling, general and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of income.

 

F-45


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The funded status of the defined benefit pension plans, a substantial portion of which consists of domestic pension plans, as of March 31, 2004 and 2005 is as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2004

    2005

    2005

 

Change in benefit obligation:

                        

Benefit obligation at beginning of year

   ¥ 74,688     ¥ 81,184     $ 756  

Service cost

     3,737       2,872       27  

Interest cost

     1,655       1,643       15  

Plan participants’ contributions

     255       —         —    

Plan amendments

     —         (10,287 )     (96 )

Actuarial loss

     2,478       2,576       24  

Foreign currency exchange rate change

     (484 )     67       1  

Benefits paid

     (1,522 )     (1,865 )     (17 )

Plan curtailment

     (132 )     —         —    

Settlements

     (407 )     —         —    

Transfer of the substitutional portion of EPF

     —         (24,670 )     (230 )

Acquisition and other

     916       858       8  
    


 


 


Benefit obligation at end of year

   ¥ 81,184     ¥ 52,378     $ 488  
    


 


 


Change in plan assets:

                        

Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year

   ¥ 54,492     ¥ 66,684     $ 621  

Actual return on plan assets

     6,457       2,768       26  

Employer contribution

     6,925       6,499       61  

Plan participants’ contributions

     255       —         —    

Benefits paid

     (1,371 )     (1,618 )     (15 )

Foreign currency exchange rate change

     (287 )     44       0  

Settlements

     26       —         —    

Transfer of the substitutional portion of EPF

     —         (9,627 )     (90 )

Acquisition and other

     187       514       5  
    


 


 


Fair value of plan assets at end of year

   ¥ 66,684     ¥ 65,264     $ 608  
    


 


 


The funded status of the plans:

                        

Funded status

   ¥ (14,500 )   ¥ 12,886     $ 120  

Unrecognized prior service cost

     (2,545 )     (12,039 )     (112 )

Unrecognized net actuarial loss

     39,587       24,248       226  

Unrecognized net transition obligation

     351       364       3  
    


 


 


Net amount recognized

   ¥ 22,893     ¥ 25,459     $ 237  
    


 


 


Amount recognized in the consolidated balance sheets consists of:

                        

Prepaid benefit cost

   ¥ 26,740     ¥ 29,734     $ 277  

Accrued benefit liability

     (17,376 )     (6,156 )     (57 )

Intangible asset

     84       94       1  

Accumulated other comprehensive loss, gross of tax

     13,445       1,787       16  
    


 


 


Net amount recognized

   ¥ 22,893     ¥ 25,459     $ 237  
    


 


 


 

The accumulated benefit obligations for all defined benefit pension plans were ¥66,642 million and ¥41,597 million ($387 million), respectively, at March 31, 2004 and 2005.

 

F-46


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

        The aggregate projected benefit obligations, aggregate accumulated benefit obligations and aggregate fair values of plan assets for the plans with the accumulated benefit obligations in excess of plan assets were ¥35,918 million, ¥31,733 million and ¥15,069 million, respectively, at March 31, 2004 and ¥16,191 million ($151 million), ¥12,722 million ($118 million) and ¥7,409 million ($69 million), respectively, at March 31, 2005.

 

Net pension cost of the plans for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 consists of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

    Millions of
U.S. dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Service cost

   ¥ 4,060     ¥ 3,737     ¥ 2,872     $ 27  

Interest cost

     1,728       1,655       1,643       15  

Expected return on plan assets

     (1,534 )     (1,231 )     (1,375 )     (13 )

Amortization of unrecognized transition obligation

     11       8       1       0  

Amortization of unrecognized net actuarial loss

     1,588       2,386       2,065       20  

Amortization of unrecognized prior service cost

     (272 )     (272 )     (767 )     (7 )

Plan curtailment and settlements

     13       229       27       0  

Settlement loss resulting from transfer of substitutional portion of EPF

     —         —         11,852       110  
    


 


 


 


Net periodic pension cost

   ¥ 5,594     ¥ 6,512     ¥ 16,318     $ 152  
    


 


 


 


 

In addition to the above net pension cost, the Company and certain subsidiaries recognized a gain on a subsidy from the government of ¥12,425 million ($115 million), in relation to the transfer of the substitutional portion of EPF. Including the above settlement loss resulting from the transfer of the substitutional portion of EPF, a net gain of ¥573 million ($5 million) in relation to transfer of the substitutional portion of EPF was recorded as a reduction in selling, general and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of income.

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries use a March 31 measurement date for the majority of its plans.

 

Significant assumptions of domestic and foreign pension plans used to determine these amounts are as follows:

 

Domestic


   2003

    2004

    2005

 

Weighted-average assumptions used to determine benefit obligations at March 31:

                  

Discount rate

   2.0 %   2.0 %   2.0 %

Rate of increase in compensation levels

   1.7 %   1.9 %   5.0 %

Weighted-average assumptions used to determine net periodic pension cost for years ended March 31:

                  

Discount rate

   2.5 %   2.0 %   2.0 %

Rate of increase in compensation levels

   2.2 %   1.7 %   1.9 %

Expected long-term rate of return on plan assets

   2.5 %   2.0 %   1.8 %

Overseas


   2003

    2004

    2005

 

Weighted-average assumptions used to determine benefit obligations at March 31:

                  

Discount rate

   6.3 %   5.7 %   5.7 %

Rate of increase in compensation levels

   4.0 %   0.1 %   0.3 %

Weighted-average assumptions used to determine net periodic pension cost for years ended March 31:

                  

Discount rate

   7.0 %   6.3 %   5.7 %

Rate of increase in compensation levels

   4.3 %   4.0 %   0.1 %

Expected long-term rate of return on plan assets

   9.3 %   8.5 %   8.3 %

 

F-47


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

In consequence of the amendment of the Company’s pension plan to a cash balance pension plan, the rate of the increase in compensation levels used to determine benefit obligations of the domestic plans at March 31, 2005 included not only the rate of the increase in the base salary but also the rate of the increase in the amounts credited to the participants’ accounts of the cash balance plan, which resulted from participants’ job titles and the promotion of their job classes.

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries determine the expected long-term rate of return on plan assets annually based on the composition of the pension asset portfolios of the plan year and the expected long-term rate of return on these portfolios. The expected long-term rate of return is designed to approximate the long-term rate of return actually earned on the plans’ assets over time to ensure that funds are available to meet the pension obligations that result from the services provided by employees. The Company and certain subsidiaries use a number of factors to determine the expected rate of return, including actual historical returns on the asset classes of the plans’ portfolios and independent projections of returns of the various asset classes.

 

The asset allocation for the Company and certain subsidiaries’ pension plans at March 31, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     2004

    2005

 

Equity securities

   30.2 %   42.3 %

Debt securities

   31.4     44.4  

Life insurance company general accounts

   6.2     7.0  

Short-term financial instruments

   31.0     5.0  

Other

   1.2     1.3  
    

 

Total

   100.0 %   100.0 %
    

 

 

Life insurance company general accounts in the above table are accounts with guaranteed capital and minimum interest rate, in which life insurance companies manage funds on several contracts.

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries’ investment policies are designed to ensure adequate plan assets are available to provide future payments of pension benefits to eligible participants. The Company and certain subsidiaries formulate a policy portfolio appropriate to produce the expected long-term rate of return on plan assets, and ensure that plan assets are allocated under this policy portfolio. The Company and certain subsidiaries periodically have an external consulting firm monitor the results of actual return and revise the policy portfolio if necessary.

 

Equity securities in which the Company and certain subsidiaries invest as pension plan assets include units of ORIX JREIT Inc. in the amounts of ¥203 million and ¥199 million ($2 million) at March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

The Company and certain subsidiaries expect to contribute ¥5,943 million ($55 million) to those pension plans during the year ending March 31, 2006.

 

F-48


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

At March 31, 2005, the benefits expected to be paid in each of the next five fiscal years, and in the aggregate for the five fiscal years thereafter are as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 1,478    $ 14

2007

     1,551      14

2008

     1,585      15

2009

     1,796      17

2010

     1,857      17

2011-2015

     11,512      107
    

  

Total

   ¥ 19,779    $ 184
    

  

 

In addition, directors and corporate auditors of certain subsidiaries receive lump-sum payments upon termination of their services under unfunded termination plans. The amount required based on length of service and remuneration to date under these plans is fully accrued.

 

The Company abolished this unfunded termination plans at June 2003.

 

Total costs charged to income for all the plans including the defined benefit plans are ¥7,094 million, ¥9,564 million and ¥4,961 million ($46 million), in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The gain on a subsidy from the government of ¥12,425 million ($115 million) and the settlement loss of ¥11,852 million ($110 million) resulting from transfer of substitutional portion of EPF were included in those costs in fiscal 2005.

 

17. Stock-Based Compensation

 

The Company has four types of stock-based compensation plans as incentive plans for directors, corporate executive officers, corporate auditors and selected employees.

 

In fiscal 1999, 2000 and 2001, the Company granted stock options to directors, corporate executive officers and certain employees of the Company and the stock options vested immediately except for the fiscal 2001 plan which had a vesting period of three years and the exercise periods are 9.75, 9.7 and 10 years from the grant date, respectively. Under the plans, option holders have the right to purchase in the aggregate 146,000, 145,000 and 316,700 treasury shares of the Company for options granted during fiscal 1999, 2000 and 2001, respectively. The grant of the rights to purchase treasury shares was accounted for under the intrinsic value method allowed per FASB Statement No. 123 (“Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation”).

 

In fiscal 2001 and 2002, the Company issued unsecured bonds with detachable warrants. Simultaneously with the issuance of the unsecured bonds, the Company purchased all of the detachable warrants from the underwriters and distributed such warrants to corporate auditors and certain employees of the Company and to directors, corporate auditors and certain employees of subsidiaries. The warrants issued in fiscal 2001 and 2002 vested immediately with an exercise period of four years. By exercising the warrants, the warrant holders can purchase in the aggregate, 126,143 and 124,303 shares of the Company granted for each fiscal year. The issuance of the warrants was accounted for under the intrinsic value method allowed per FASB Statement No. 123.

 

In fiscal 2002, the Company granted another option plan of which the vesting period was two years and the exercise period was 10 years from the grant date. Under this plan, the Company issued warrants to directors, corporate executive officers and certain employees of the Company to purchase, in the aggregate, 300,900 shares of the Company’s common stock at an exercise price. The issuance of the warrants was accounted for under the intrinsic value method allowed per FASB Statement No. 123.

 

F-49


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

In fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, the Company granted stock acquisition rights that had a vesting period of 1.67, 1.92 and 1.92 years and an exercise period of 9.67, 9.92 and 9.92 years, respectively. The acquisition rights were to purchase, in the aggregate, 453,300, 516,000 and 528,900 shares of the Company’s common stock at an exercise price. The acquisition rights were distributed to directors, corporate executive officers, corporate auditors and certain employees of the Company, subsidiaries and affiliated companies. The issuance of the stock acquisition rights was accounted for under the intrinsic value method allowed per FASB Statement No. 123.

 

The Board of Directors intends to obtain approval from shareholders, at the next general meeting, to be held on June 21, 2005, for an additional grant of stock acquisition rights for 580,000 shares, to directors, corporate executive officers, corporate auditors and certain employees of the Company, subsidiaries and affiliated companies during the year ending March 31, 2006.

 

For all plans above, the exercise prices, which are determined by a formula linked to the stock price of the Company’s shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, are equal or greater than the fair market value of the Company’s shares at the grant dates.

 

The fair value of these stock options was estimated using the Black-Scholes option pricing model under the following assumptions:

 

     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Grant-date fair value

   ¥ 3,126     ¥ 3,351     ¥ 5,917     $ (55.10 )

Expected life

     6.95 Years       8.90 Years       8.92 Years       8.92 Years  

Risk-free rate

     0.52 %     0.81 %     1.67 %     1.67 %

Expected volatility

     43.52 %     41.79 %     42.67 %     42.67 %

Expected dividend yield

     0.339 %     0.346 %     0.210 %     0.210 %

 

The following table summarizes information about stock option activity for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005:

 

     2003

   2004

   2005

     Number of
shares


    Weighted average
exercise price


   Number of
shares


    Weighted average
exercise price


   Number of
shares


    Weighted average
exercise price


       Yen

     Yen

     Yen

   U. S. dollar

Outstanding at beginning of year

   1,568,253     ¥ 11,991    1,833,405     ¥ 11,333    2,050,910     ¥ 10,349    $ 96.37

Granted

   453,300       7,452    516,000       7,230    528,900       12,121      112.87

Exercised

   (62,929 )     6,899    (25,200 )     7,779    (329,989 )     8,501      79.16

Forfeited or expired

   (125,219 )     7,758    (273,295 )     11,297    (145,138 )     13,674      127.33
    

        

        

            

Outstanding at end of year

   1,833,405       11,333    2,050,910       10,349    2,104,683       10,855      101.08
    

 

  

 

  

 

  

Exercisable at end of year

   767,905     ¥ 11,225    1,086,010     ¥ 13,029    1,069,283     ¥ 11,950    $ 111.28
    

 

  

 

  

 

  

 

The exercise prices of the granted options were adjusted on April 1, 2000 for a 1.2-for-1 stock split implemented on May 19, 2000.

 

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Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Summary information about the Company’s stock options outstanding and exercisable at March 31, 2005 is as follows:

 

   

Outstanding


 

Exercisable


Range of exercise

price


 

Number of shares


 

Weighted average
remaining life


      Weighted average    
exercise price


 

Number of shares


      Weighted average    
exercise price


Yen


   

Years


  Yen

    Yen

    ¥  7,230-¥10,000

    801,900   7.63     ¥7,332     294,400     ¥7,509

      10,001-  13,000

    995,583   7.17       12,020     467,683       11,907

      13,001-  16,272

    307,200   5.25       16,272     307,200       16,272
   
 
 

 
 

        7,230-  16,272

  2,104,683   7.06       10,855   1,069,283       11,950
   

Outstanding


 

Exercisable


Range of exercise

price


 

Number of shares


 

Weighted average
remaining life


  Weighted average
exercise price


 

Number of shares


  Weighted average
exercise price


U.S. dollars


   

Years


  U.S. dollars

    U.S. dollars

    $67.32-$  93.12

    801,900   7.63   $ 68.27     294,400   $ 69.92

      93.13-  121.05

    995,583   7.17       111.93     467,683       110.88

    121.06-  151.52

    307,200   5.25       151.52     307,200       151.52
   
 
 

 
 

      67.32-  151.52

  2,104,683   7.06       101.08   1,069,283       111.28

 

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Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

18. Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)

 

Changes in each component of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows. Comprehensive income (loss) and its components have been reported, net of tax, in the consolidated statements of shareholders’ equity.

 

     Millions of yen

 
     Net unrealized
gains on
investment in
securities


    Minimum
pension liability
adjustments


    Foreign
currency
translation
adjustments


    Net unrealized
losses on
derivative
instruments


    Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss)


 

Balance at March 31, 2002

   ¥ 14,756     ¥ (6,834 )   ¥ (14,800 )   ¥ (6,562 )   ¥ (13,440 )

Net unrealized losses on investment in securities, net of tax of ¥7,887 million

     (14,300 )                             (14,300 )

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of ¥(841) million

     1,461                               1,461  

Minimum pension liability adjustments, net of tax of ¥(1,986) million

             2,652                       2,652  

Foreign currency translation adjustments, net of tax of ¥835 million

                     (15,780 )             (15,780 )

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income

                     661               661  

Net unrealized losses on derivative instruments, net of tax of ¥1,040 million

                             (1,785 )     (1,785 )

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of ¥(595) million

                             784       784  
    


 


 


 


 


Current period change

     (12,839 )     2,652       (15,119 )     (1,001 )     (26,307 )
    


 


 


 


 


 

     Millions of yen

 
     Net unrealized
gains on
investment in
securities


   

Minimum
pension

liability
adjustments


    Foreign
currency
translation
adjustments


    Net unrealized
losses on
derivative
instruments


    Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss)


 

Balance at March 31, 2003

     1,917       (4,182 )     (29,919 )     (7,563 )     (39,747 )

Net unrealized gains on investment in securities, net of tax of ¥(17,929) million

     26,875                               26,875  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of ¥2,750 million

     (3,744 )                             (3,744 )

Minimum pension liability adjustments, net of tax of ¥2,573 million

             (3,785 )                     (3,785 )

Foreign currency translation adjustments, net of tax of ¥3,192 million

                     (15,467 )             (15,467 )

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income

                     (243 )             (243 )

Net unrealized gains on derivative instruments, net of tax of ¥(1,846) million

                             2,588       2,588  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of ¥(265) million

                             382       382  
    


 


 


 


 


Current period change

     23,131       (3,785 )     (15,710 )     2,970       6,606  
    


 


 


 


 


Balance at March 31, 2004

     25,048       (7,967 )     (45,629 )     (4,593 )     (33,141 )

Net unrealized gains on investment in securities, net of tax of ¥(13,192) million

     23,205                               23,205  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of ¥5,628 million

     (8,103 )                             (8,103 )

Minimum pension liability adjustments, net of tax of ¥ (4,781) million

             6,877                       6,877  

Foreign currency translation adjustments, net of tax of ¥(81) million

                     4,971               4,971  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income

                     1,048               1,048  

Net unrealized gains on derivative instruments, net of tax of ¥(1,467) million

                             2,738       2,738  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of ¥(398) million

                             532       532  
    


 


 


 


 


Current period change

     15,102       6,877       6,019       3,270       31,268  
    


 


 


 


 


Balance at March 31, 2005

   ¥ 40,150     ¥ (1,090 )   ¥ (39,610 )   ¥ (1,323 )   ¥ (1,873 )
    


 


 


 


 


 

F-52


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

     Millions of U.S. dollars

 
     Net unrealized
gains on
investment in
securities


    Minimum
pension
liability
adjustments


    Foreign
currency
translation
adjustments


    Net unrealized
losses on
derivative
instruments


    Accumulated
other
comprehensive
income (loss)


 

Balance at March 31, 2004

   $ 233     $ (74 )   $ (425 )   $ (42 )   $ (308 )

Net unrealized gains on investment in securities, net of tax of $ (123) million

     216                               216  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of $53 million

     (75 )                             (75 )

Minimum pension liability adjustments, net of tax of $(45) million

             64                       64  

Foreign currency translation adjustments, net of tax of $(1) million

                     46               46  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income

                     10               10  

Net unrealized gains on derivative instruments, net of tax of $(14) million

                             25       25  

Reclassification adjustment for losses included in net income, net of tax of (3) $million

                             5       5  
    


 


 


 


 


Current period change

     141       64       56       30       291  
    


 


 


 


 


Balance at March 31, 2005

   $ 374     $ (10 )   $ (369 )   $ (12 )   $ (17 )
    


 


 


 


 


 

19. Shareholders’ Equity

 

Changes in the number of shares issued and outstanding in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are as follows:

 

     Number of shares

     2003

   2004

   2005

Beginning balance

   84,303,985    84,365,914    84,366,314

Exercise of warrants

   61,929    400    249,089

Conversion of convertible bonds

   —      —      3,380,687

Ending balance

   84,365,914    84,366,314    87,996,090

 

Prior to October 1, 2001, the Japanese Commercial Code (the “Code”) provided that an amount equivalent to at least 10% of cash dividends paid and other cash outlays resulting from appropriation of retained earnings be appropriated to a legal reserve until such reserve equaled 25% of issued capital. The Code, amended effective on October 1, 2001, provides that an amount equivalent to at least 10% of cash dividends paid and other cash outlays resulting from appropriation of retained earnings be appropriated to the legal reserve until the aggregate amount of the additional paid-in capital and the legal reserve equals 25% of the issued capital. The Code also provides that both additional paid-in capital and the legal reserve are not available for cash dividends but may be used to reduce a capital deficit and may be reduced (in the case of the latter, in aggregate, the remainder after such reduction should not be less than 25% of the issued capital and a resolution of a general meeting of shareholders is required), or may be capitalized by resolution of the Board of Directors.

 

The Code provides that at least one-half of the issue price of new shares be included in common stock. In conformity therewith, the Company has divided the principal amount of bonds converted into common stock and proceeds received from the issuance of common stock, including the exercise of warrants and stock acquisition rights, equally between common stock and additional paid-in capital by resolution of the Board of Directors.

 

The Board of Directors resolved in May 2005 that total of ¥3,496 million ($33 million) dividends shall be distributed to the shareholders of record as of March 31, 2005. The liability for declared dividends and related impact on shareholder’s equity are accounted for in the period of such board of directors’ resolution.

 

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Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The amount available for dividends under the Code is calculated based on the amount recorded in the Company’s non-consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in Japan, and there are restrictions on the payment of dividends relating to net unrealized gains on investment in securities and earnings associated with derivative contracts, amounting to ¥19,992 million ($186 million) as of March 31, 2005. As a result, the amount available for dividends is ¥109,312 million ($1,018 million) as of March 31, 2005.

 

Retained earnings at March 31, 2005 include ¥39,617 million ($369 million) relating to equity in undistributed earnings of the companies accounted for by the equity method.

 

As of March 31, 2005, the restricted net assets of certain subsidiaries include regulatory capital requirements for life insurance, banking and securities brokerage operations of ¥31,414 million ($293 million).

 

20. Brokerage Commissions and Net Gains on Investment Securities

 

Brokerage commissions and net gains on investment securities in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 consist of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Brokerage commissions

   ¥ 2,400    ¥ 3,967    ¥ 4,516    $ 42

Net gains on investment securities

     8,457      22,058      29,390      274
    

  

  

  

     ¥ 10,857    ¥ 26,025    ¥ 33,906    $ 316
    

  

  

  

 

Trading activities—Net gains on investment securities include net trading loss of ¥1,040 million, net trading gain of ¥1,500 million and net trading loss of ¥215 million ($2 million) for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Net gains of ¥231 million, ¥431 million and net losses of ¥166 million ($2 million) on derivative trading instruments are also included in net gains on investment securities for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

21. Life Insurance Operations

 

Life insurance premiums and related investment income in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 consist of the following:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Life insurance premiums

   ¥ 122,963    ¥ 119,458    ¥ 125,806    $ 1,172

Life insurance related investment income

     15,476      14,696      11,198      104
    

  

  

  

     ¥ 138,439    ¥ 134,154    ¥ 137,004    $ 1,276
    

  

  

  

 

The benefits and expenses of life insurance operations, included in life insurance costs in the consolidated statements of income, are associated with earned premiums so as to result in the recognition of profits over the life of contracts. This association is accomplished by means of the provision for future policy benefits and the deferral and subsequent amortization of policy acquisition costs (principally commissions and certain other expenses relating to policy issuance and underwriting). These policy acquisition costs are amortized over the respective policy periods in proportion to premium revenue recognized. Amortization charged to income for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 amounted to ¥11,740 million, ¥10,017 million and ¥10,359 million ($96 million), respectively.

 

F-54


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

22. Other Operations

 

In fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, other operating revenues include revenues from integrated facilities management operations, which amounted to ¥11,731 million, ¥17,705 million and ¥30,974 million ($288 million), respectively, and their related expenses were ¥9,602 million, ¥15,599 million and ¥28,534 million ($266 million), respectively, which are included in other operating expenses.

 

Other items consist of revenues and expenses from golf courses, a training facility and hotels, operating results from real estate related business and the servicing of receivables in a foreign subsidiary, commissions for the sale of insurance and other financial products and revenues and expenses from other operations, of which there were no items exceeding 10% of total other operating revenues and expenses in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

Gains and losses from the disposition of operating facilities included in other operating assets are not significant for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005.

 

23. Write-downs of Long-Lived Assets

 

In accordance with FASB Statement No. 144 (“Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets”), the Company and subsidiaries performed tests for impairment on some assets for which events or changes in circumstances indicated that the carrying amount might not be recoverable. The Company and subsidiaries consider an asset’s carrying amount as not recoverable when such carrying amount exceeds the sum of undiscounted cash flows expected to result from the use and eventual disposition of the asset. When it is determined that an asset’s carrying amount is not recoverable, an impairment loss is measured as the amount by which the carrying amount exceeds the asset’s estimated fair value. Fair value was calculated by independent third party appraisals, appraisals prepared internally by the Company’s own staff of appraisers, based on recent transactions involving sales of similar assets, or other valuation techniques to estimate fair value.

 

During fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, the Company and certain subsidiaries recognized impairment losses for the difference between long-lived asset carrying values and estimated fair values in the amount of ¥50,682 million, ¥12,345 million and ¥11,713 million ($109 million), respectively, which are reflected as write-downs of long-lived assets. The losses of ¥1,879 million ($18 million) were included in the Americas’ segment, ¥1,318 million ($12 million) were included in the real estate segment and ¥768 million ($7 million) were included in the real estate-related finance segment respectively, and the remaining ¥7,748 million ($72 million) of losses was recorded separately from segment information for assets considered corporate assets in fiscal 2005. The details of significant write-downs are as follows.

 

Golf courses—In fiscal 2003, certain subsidiaries determined to write their owned four golf courses down to each its estimated fair value due to the reduction in play fees reflecting competition with surrounding golf courses resulting in write-downs of long-lived assets of ¥25,270 million. In fiscal 2004, certain subsidiaries wrote their two golf courses down to each estimated fair values resulting in write-downs of long-lived assets of ¥3,473 million due to cash flow declining on their golf courses because of competition with surrounding golf courses, which resulted in a decrease in the number of visitors and playing fees. There was no impairment for these golf courses in fiscal 2005.

 

Corporate Dormitories—The Company and a subsidiary have a business activity that consists of leasing corporate dormitory buildings to major corporations in Japan. During fiscal 2003, ¥3,137 million of write-downs for several dormitory properties were recorded, due to the deterioration of terms and conditions of lease contracts between those corporations and the Company or a subsidiary. During fiscal 2004, ¥2,071 million of write-downs

 

F-55


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

for a few dormitory properties were recorded, due to some lease contracts with corporate customers that were restructured at lower rental rates or expired without being renewed. During fiscal 2005, the Company determined that expected future cash flows were less than the current carrying amount for one dormitory property because the lease contract with corporate customer expired without being renewed, and recognized its estimated fair value was below current carrying amount. As the result, the Company wrote down the dormitory to its estimated fair value resulting in write-downs of long-lived assets of ¥500 million ($5 million).

 

Office Buildings—During fiscal 2003, ¥7,257 million of write-downs were recorded, due to a decline in current rental rates. During fiscal 2004, the business environment for office buildings recovered slightly and rental rates stopped declining in certain areas, but the Company wrote down an office building in a city other than Tokyo to the estimated fair value resulting in write-downs of long-lived assets of ¥766 million. During fiscal 2005, the business environment for office buildings improved compared to the previous fiscal year, but the Company wrote down to the estimated fair value an office building in a city other than Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya resulting in write-downs of long-lived assets of ¥306 million ($3 million). This office building became vacant due to the bankruptcy of an office tenant and the Company determined its carrying amount was not recoverable with expected future cash flows.

 

Hotel properties and Commercial Complex—During fiscal 2003, ¥4,910 million of write-downs were recorded due to the decline in occupancy rates at several of the hotel properties owned by the Company and certain subsidiaries. During fiscal 2004, a subsidiary in the United States reexamined the expected future cash flow generated from a commercial complex in a redevelopment area due to changes of the development project. Accordingly the subsidiary wrote down this property to the estimated fair value resulting in a write-downs of ¥3,019 million. During fiscal 2005, a subsidiary in the United States determined that expected future cash flows were less than the current carrying amount for a certain commercial complex due to a decrease in current rental rates. The estimated fair value was less than the current carrying amount, and as a result, the subsidiary recorded ¥1,879 million ($17 million) of write-downs.

 

Condominiums—During fiscal 2003 and 2004, ¥6,480 million of write-downs for approximately 540 units and ¥915 million of write-downs for approximately 160 units were recorded, respectively, due to the decline in the expected cash flow by each unit. During fiscal 2005, the Company tested for impairment based on cash flow information by each unit and has written these condominiums down to their estimated fair value resulting in write-downs of long-lived assets of ¥554 million ($5 million) for approximately 90 units.

 

Others—During fiscal 2003 and 2004, the Company and certain subsidiaries recorded ¥3,628 million and ¥2,101 million of write-downs of long-lived assets, respectively, for other long-lived assets including developed and undeveloped land. During fiscal 2005, the Company and certain subsidiaries recorded impairment losses of ¥8,474 million ($79 million) for properties consisting of ¥7,705 million ($72 million) of a write-down for a property in Japan that was reclassified from office facilities to rental purpose and was assessed based on its revised expected future cash flows as rental purpose after it was decided that the building would be rebuilt, and ¥769 million ($7 million) for other real estate including developed and undeveloped land.

 

24. Discontinued Operations

 

The Company and its subsidiaries own various real estate properties, including commercial and office buildings, for rental operations. FASB Statement No. 144 (“Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets”) requires to reclassify operations related to these real estate sold or to be disposed of by sale to discontinued operations, if the Company and its subsidiaries have no significant continuing involvement in sold properties. In fiscal 2004 and 2005, the Company, its subsidiaries in Japan and a subsidiary in the United States

 

F-56


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

sold real estate for rental without significant continuing involvement in those sold properties and earned ¥3,747 million and ¥9,964 million ($93 million) of aggregated gains, respectively. In addition, the Company and its subsidiaries determined to dispose of by sale properties for rental without a significant continuing involvement in those properties of ¥9,131 million and ¥16,532 million ($154 million) which are mainly included in the investment in operating leases in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets at March 31, 2004 and 2005. Under this Statement, the Company and the subsidiaries report these gains on sales of rental properties, rental revenues generated and other expenses incurred by the operations of both the properties, which have been sold and to be disposed of by sale as income from discontinued operations in the accompanying consolidated statements of income. Income and expenses generated by the operations of these properties recognized in fiscal 2003 and 2004 have also been reclassified as income from discontinued operations in each year in the accompanying consolidated statements of income. Revenues from operations for the discontinued operations reclassified in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 are ¥4,578 million, ¥9,832 million and ¥13,872 million ($129 million), respectively, and income before income taxes are ¥902 million, ¥4,916 million and ¥10,037 million ($93 million) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

25. Per Share Data

 

In Japan, dividends which are payable to shareholders of record at the end of a fiscal year had been approved at the annual general meeting of shareholders held subsequent to the year-end fiscal 2003. After fiscal 2004, the Company adopted a “Company with Committees” board model, which became possible as a result of an amendment to the Japanese Commercial Code effective in April 2003, and accordingly dividends are resolved at the board of directors meeting held subsequent to the year-end. Therefore, the declaration of these dividends is not reflected in the financial statements at such fiscal year-ends.

 

Reconciliation of the differences between basic and diluted earnings per share (EPS) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 is as follows:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Income from continuing operations

   ¥ 24,578    ¥ 50,510    ¥ 85,521    $ 796

Effect of dilutive securities—

                           

Convertible notes

     85      1,432      1,362      13
    

  

  

  

Income from continuing operations for diluted EPS computation

   ¥ 24,663    ¥ 51,942    ¥ 86,883    $ 809
    

  

  

  

 

     Thousands of shares

     2003

   2004

   2005

Weighted-average shares

   83,672    83,685    84,110

Effect of dilutive securities—

              

Warrants

   —      97    381

Convertible notes

   5,273    8,409    8,120

Treasury stock

   5    4    45
    
  
  

Weighted-average shares for diluted EPS computation

   88,950    92,195    92,656
    
  
  

 

     Yen

   U.S. dollars

     2003

   2004

   2005

   2005

Earnings per share for income from continuing operations:

                           

Basic

   ¥ 293.74    ¥ 603.58    ¥ 1,016.78    $ 9.47

Diluted

     277.27      563.39      937.70      8.73

 

F-57


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

As a result of adopting EITF Issue No. 04-8 (“the Effect of Contingently Convertible Instruments on Diluted Earnings per Share”), diluted earnings per share for income from continuing operations and net income for fiscal 2004 have been restated retroactively in the above table. It did not have a dilutive effect on earnings per share for fiscal 2003:

 

26. Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging

 

(a) Risk management policy

 

The Company and its subsidiaries manage interest rate risk through asset liability management systems. The Company and its subsidiaries use derivative financial instruments to hedge interest rate risk and avoid changes in interest rates having a significant adverse effect. As a result of interest rate fluctuations, the fair value of hedged assets and liabilities will appreciate or depreciate. However, such appreciation or depreciation will generally be offset by using derivative financial instruments as hedging instruments. Derivative financial instruments that the Company and its subsidiaries use as part of the interest risk management include interest rate swaps and interest rate caps.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries employ foreign currency borrowings, foreign exchange forward contracts, and foreign currency swap agreements to hedge risks that are associated with certain transactions and investments denominated in foreign currencies due to the potential for changes in exchange rates. Similarly, in general, overseas subsidiaries structure their liabilities to match the currency-denomination of assets in each region.

 

By using derivative instruments, the Company and its subsidiaries are exposed to credit risk in the event of nonperformance by counterparties. The Company and its subsidiaries attempt to manage the credit risk by carefully evaluating the quality of counterparties in advance and regularly monitoring counterparties and derivative transactions after contracts have been concluded.

 

(b) Cash flow hedges

 

The Company and its subsidiaries designate interest rate swap agreements, foreign currency swap agreements and foreign exchange forward contracts as cash flow hedges for variability of cash flows originating from floating rate borrowings and forecasted transactions. The interest rate swap agreements outstanding as of March 31, 2005 mature at various dates through 2020. Net losses before deducting applicable taxes on derivative contracts that were reclassified from other comprehensive loss into earnings through other operating expenses and other operating revenues were ¥784 million, ¥382 million and ¥532 million ($5 million) during fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Net losses of ¥124 million, net gains of ¥19 million and ¥45 million ($0 million), which represents the total ineffectiveness of cash flow hedges, were recorded in earnings, through other operating expenses and other operating revenues, for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively. Approximately ¥708 million ($7 million) of net derivative losses included in accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of applicable income taxes at March 31, 2005 will be reclassified into earnings through other operating expenses within fiscal 2006.

 

(c) Fair value hedges

 

The Company and its subsidiaries use financial instruments designated as fair value hedges to hedge their exposure to interest rate risk and foreign currency exchange risk. The Company and its subsidiaries designate foreign currency swap agreements and foreign exchange forward contracts to minimize foreign currency exposures on operating assets including lease receivables, loan receivables and borrowings. Certain subsidiaries, which issued medium-term notes with fixed interest rates, use interest rate swap contracts to hedge interest rate exposure of the fair values of these medium-term notes. In cases where the medium-term notes were

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

denominated in other than the subsidiaries’ local currency, foreign currency swap agreements are used to hedge foreign exchange rate exposure. For fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, a gain of ¥0 million, ¥3 million and ¥231 million ($2 million) of hedge ineffectiveness associated with instruments designated as fair value hedges were recorded in earnings through other operating revenues.

 

(d) Hedges of net investment in foreign operations

 

The Company uses foreign exchange forward contracts and borrowings denominated in the subsidiaries’ local currencies to hedge the foreign currency exposure of the net investment in foreign subsidiaries. The gains and losses of these hedging instruments were recorded in foreign currency translation adjustments, which is a part of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss). The net gain (loss) of foreign currency translation adjustments for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 were a gain of ¥5,052 million, ¥9,010 million and a loss of ¥6,471 million ($60 million), respectively.

 

(e) Trading and other derivatives

 

Certain subsidiaries engage in trading activities with various future contracts. The Company and certain subsidiaries entered into interest rate swap agreements, caps and foreign exchange forward contracts for risk management purposes but not qualified for hedge accounting under FASB Statement No. 133. In accordance with FASB Statement No. 133, conversion options were bifurcated from the Company and certain subsidiaries’ convertible bonds and are recorded as stand-alone derivative contracts. At March 31, 2004 and 2005, the total face amounts were ¥29,735 million and ¥4,488 million ($42 million), respectively, and the fair value of conversion option were ¥910 million and ¥12 million ($0 million), respectively.

 

The following table provides notional amount information about derivative instruments as of March 31, 2004 and 2005. The notional amounts of derivatives do not represent amounts exchanged by the parties and, thus, are not a measure of the exposure to market risk or credit risk.

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of
U.S. dollars


     2004

   2005

   2005

Interest rate risk management:

                    

Interest rate swap agreements

   ¥ 440,894    ¥ 366,838    $ 3,416

Options and caps held

     56,361      44,752      417

Forward contracts

     97,510      —        —  

Foreign exchange risk management:

                    

Foreign exchange forward contracts

   ¥ 117,939    ¥ 146,964    $ 1,369

Futures

     114      124      1

Foreign currency swap agreements

     224,628      136,636      1,272

Trading activities:

                    

Futures

   ¥ 213,802    ¥ 120,090    $ 1,118

Options and caps held

     1,446      1,388      13

Options and caps written

     1,317      1,000      9

Foreign exchange forward contracts

     8,387      4,136      39

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

27. Significant Concentrations of Credit Risk

 

The Company and its subsidiaries have established various policies and procedures to manage credit exposure, including initial credit approval, credit limits, collateral and guarantee requirements, obtaining rights of offset and continuous oversight. The Company and its subsidiaries’ principal financial instrument portfolio consists of direct financing leases and installment loans which are secured by title to the leased assets and assets specifically collateralized in relation to loan agreements. When deemed necessary, guarantees are also obtained. The value and adequacy of the collateral are continually monitored. Consequently, the risk of credit loss from counterparties’ failure to perform in connection with collateralized financing activities is believed to be minimal. The Company and its subsidiaries have access to collateral in case of bankruptcy and other losses. However, a significant decline in real estate markets could result in a decline in value of the secured real estate below the mortgage setting amount which would expose the Company and certain subsidiaries to unsecured credit risk.

 

At March 31, 2004 and 2005, no concentration with a single obligor exceeded 1% of consolidated total assets. With respect to the Company and its subsidiaries’ credit exposures on a geographic basis, approximately ¥3,878 billion, or 83%, at March 31, 2004 and approximately ¥4,230 billion ($39,389 million), or 85%, at March 31, 2005 of the credit risks arising from all financial instruments are attributable to customers located in Japan. The largest concentration of credit risks outside of Japan is exposure attributable to obligors located in the United States of America. The gross amount of such exposure is ¥418 billion and ¥364 billion ($3,390 million) as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries make direct financing lease and operating lease contracts mostly with lessees in commercial industries for their office, industry, commercial service, transport and other equipment. At March 31, 2004 and 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries had concentrations in certain equipment types included in investment in direct financing leases and operating leases which exceeded 10% of the consolidated total assets. The percentage of investment in transportation equipment to consolidated total assets is 12.1% and 12.0% as of March 31, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

28. Estimated Fair Value of Financial Instruments

 

The following information is provided to help readers gain an understanding of the relationship between amounts reported in the accompanying consolidated financial statements and the related market or fair value.

 

The disclosures include financial instruments and derivatives financial instruments, other than investment in direct financing leases, investment in subsidiaries and affiliates, pension obligations and insurance contracts.

 

March 31, 2004

 

     Millions of yen

     Carrying
amount


   Estimated fair
value


Trading instruments

             

Trading securities

   ¥ 26,354    ¥ 26,354

Futures:

             

Assets

     602      602

Liabilities

     44      44

Options and other derivatives:

             

Assets

     45      45

Liabilities

     32      32

Non-trading instruments

             

Assets:

             

Cash and cash equivalents

     152,235      152,235

Restricted cash

     35,621      35,621

Time deposits

     677      677

Installment loans (net of allowance for probable loan losses)

     2,147,928      2,162,285

Investment in securities:

             

Practicable to estimate fair value

     386,797      386,797

Not practicable to estimate fair value

     138,777      138,777

Liabilities:

             

Short-term debt

     903,916      903,916

Deposits

     292,545      296,036

Long-term debt

     2,662,719      2,672,585

Foreign exchange forward contracts:

             

Assets

     1,566      1,566

Liabilities

     1,264      1,264

Foreign currency swap agreements:

             

Assets

     16,607      16,607

Liabilities

     1,328      1,328

Interest rate swap agreements:

             

Assets

     1,386      1,386

Liabilities

     9,364      9,364

Options and other derivatives:

             

Assets

     1,590      1,590

Liabilities

     1      1

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

March 31, 2005                          
    Millions of yen

   Millions of U.S. dollars

    Carrying
amount


  Estimated fair
value


   Carrying
amount


   Estimated fair
value


Trading instruments

                         

Trading securities

  ¥ 47,784   ¥ 47,784    $ 445    $ 445

Futures:

                         

Assets

    264     264      2      2

Liabilities

    60     60      1      1

Options and other derivatives:

                         

Assets

    11     11      0      0

Liabilities

    50     50      0      0

Non-trading instruments

                         

Assets:

                         

Cash and cash equivalents

    145,380     145,380      1,354      1,354

Restricted cash

    53,193     53,193      495      495

Time deposits

    8,678     8,678      81      81

Installment loans (net of allowance for probable loan losses)

    2,307,611     2,306,350      21,489      21,476

Investment in securities:

                         

Practicable to estimate fair value

    390,542     390,542      3,637      3,637

Not practicable to estimate fair value

    150,945     150,945      1,405      1,405

Liabilities:

                         

Short-term debt

    947,871     947,871      8,826      8,826

Deposits

    336,588     341,846      3,134      3,183

Long-term debt

    2,861,863     2,873,735      26,649      26,760

Foreign exchange forward contracts:

                         

Assets

    471     471      4      4

Liabilities

    3,925     3,925      37      37

Foreign currency swap agreements:

                         

Assets

    5,256     5,256      49      49

Liabilities

    2,729     2,729      25      25

Interest rate swap agreements:

                         

Assets

    1,900     1,900      18      18

Liabilities

    3,616     3,616      34      34

Options and other derivatives:

                         

Assets

    22     22      0      0

 

The estimated fair value amounts were determined using available market information, discounted cash flow information utilized by the Company and its subsidiaries in conducting new business and certain valuation methodologies. If quoted market prices were not readily available, management estimated a fair value. Accordingly, the estimates may not be indicative of the amounts at which the financial instruments could be exchanged in a current or future market transaction. Due to the uncertainty of expected cash flows resulting from financial instruments, the use of different assumptions and valuation methodologies may have a significant effect on the derived estimated fair value amounts.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Estimation of fair value

 

The following methods and significant assumptions were used to estimate the fair value of each class of financial instrument for which it is practicable to estimate a value:

 

Cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash, time deposits and short-term debt—For cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash, time deposits and short-term debt, the carrying amounts recognized in the balance sheets were determined to be reasonable estimates of their fair values due to their relatively short maturity.

 

Installment loans—The carrying amounts of floating-rate installment loans with no significant changes in credit risk and which could be repriced within a short-term period were determined to be reasonable estimates of their fair values. For certain homogeneous categories of medium- and long-term fixed-rate loans, such as housing loans and other loans, the estimated fair values were calculated by discounting the future cash flows using the current interest rates charged by the Company and its subsidiaries for new loans made to borrowers with similar credit ratings and remaining maturities.

 

Investment in securities—For trading securities and available-for-sale securities, the estimated fair values, which are also the carrying amounts recorded in the balance sheets, were generally based on quoted market prices or quotations provided by dealers. For held-to-maturity securities, the estimated fair values were based on quoted market prices, if available. If a quoted market price was not available, estimated fair values were determined using quoted market prices for similar securities or the carrying amounts (where carrying amounts were believed to approximate the estimated fair values).

 

For other securities, for which there were no quoted market prices, reasonable estimates of fair values could not be made without incurring excessive costs.

 

Deposits—The carrying amounts of demand deposits recognized in the consolidated balance sheets were determined to be reasonable estimates of their fair value. The estimated fair values of time deposits were calculated by discounting the future cash flows. The current interest rates offered for the deposits with similar terms and remaining average maturities were used as the discount rates.

 

Long-term debt—The carrying amounts of long-term debt with floating rates which could be repriced within short-term periods were determined to be reasonable estimates of their fair values. For medium-and long-term fixed-rate debt, the estimated fair values were calculated by discounting the future cash flows. The borrowing interest rates that were currently available to the Company and its subsidiaries offered by financial institutions for debt with similar terms and remaining average maturities were used as the discount rates.

 

Derivatives—The fair value of derivatives generally reflects the estimated amounts that the Company and its subsidiaries would receive or pay to terminate the contracts at the reporting date, thereby taking into account the current unrealized gains or losses of open contracts. Discounted amounts of future cash flows using the current interest rate are available for most of the Company’s and its subsidiaries’ derivatives.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

29. Commitments, Guarantees, and Contingent Liabilities

 

Commitments—As of March 31, 2005, the Company and its subsidiaries had commitments for the purchase of equipment to be leased, having a cost of ¥8,538 million ($80 million).

 

The minimum future rentals on non-cancelable operating leases are as follows. The longest contract will mature in fiscal 2032.

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of
yen


   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 1,394    $ 13

2007

     1,000      9

2008

     764      7

2009

     427      4

2010

     201      2

Thereafter

     1,246      12
    

  

Total

   ¥ 5,032    $ 47
    

  

 

The Company and its subsidiaries lease office space under operating lease agreements, which are primarily cancelable, and made rental payments totaling ¥7,293 million, ¥7,042 million and ¥8,428 million ($78 million) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively.

 

Certain computer systems of the Company and its subsidiaries have been operated and maintained under non-cancelable contracts with third-party service providers. For such services, the Company and its subsidiaries made payments totaling ¥1,795 million, ¥3,320 million and ¥3,405 million ($32 million) in fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005, respectively. The longest contract of them will mature in fiscal 2009. At March 31, 2005, the amounts due in each of the next five years are as follows:

 

Years ending March 31,


   Millions of
yen


   Millions of
U.S. dollars


2006

   ¥ 3,409    $ 32

2007

     3,389      31

2008

     1,689      16

2009

     129      1

2010

     —        —  
    

  

Total

   ¥ 8,616    $ 80
    

  

 

The Company and its subsidiaries have commitments to fund estimated construction costs to complete ongoing real estate development projects and other commitments, amounting in total to ¥179,003 million ($1,667 million) as of March 31, 2005.

 

The Company and its subsidiaries have agreements under which they are committed to execute loans as long as the agreed-upon terms are met such as card loans. As of March 31, 2005, the total unused credit amount available is ¥222,249 million ($2,070 million).

 

Guarantees—The Company and its subsidiaries adopted FASB Interpretation No. 45 (“Guarantor’s Accounting and Disclosure Requirements for Guarantees, Including Indirect Guarantees of Indebtedness of Others”), and at the inception of a guarantee, recognized a liability in the consolidated balance sheets for the fair

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

value of the guarantees within the scope of FASB Interpretation No. 45 issued or amended on and after January 1, 2003. Adoption of this Statement did not have a significant effect on the Company and its subsidiaries’ results of operations or financial position. The following table represents the summary of guarantees recorded as guarantee liabilities as of the March 31, 2004 and 2005 and potential future payments of the guarantee contracts outstanding:

 

     Millions of yen

   Millions of U.S. dollars

     2004

   2005

   2005

Guarantees


   Potential future
payment


  

Book value of

guarantee
liabilities


  

Potential future

payment


  

Book value of

guarantee
liabilities


  

Potential future

payment


  

Book value of

guarantee
liabilities


Housing loans

   ¥ 43,402    ¥ 10,024    ¥ 37,391    ¥ 8,543    $ 348    $ 80

Consumer loans

     25,473      2,809      21,908      2,606      204      24

Corporate loans

     53,672      1,726      102,698      3,035      957      28

Other

     2,964      —        1,728      108      16      1
    

  

  

  

  

  

Total

   ¥ 125,511    ¥ 14,559    ¥ 163,725    ¥ 14,292    $ 1,525    $ 133
    

  

  

  

  

  

 

Guarantee of housing loans: The Company and certain subsidiaries guarantee the housing loans issued by Japanese financial institutions to third party individuals and employees of the Company and certain subsidiaries. The Company and its subsidiaries are typically obliged to pay the outstanding loans when these loans become delinquent more than three months. The housing loans are usually secured by real properties. Once the Company and its subsidiaries assume the guaranteed parties’ obligation, the Company and its subsidiaries acquire the right of the collateral.

 

Guarantee of consumer loans: A subsidiary guarantees the consumer loans, typically card loans, issued by Japanese financial institutions. The subsidiary is obliged to pay the outstanding obligations when these loans become delinquent generally for more than two months.

 

Guarantee of corporate loans: The Company and certain subsidiaries guarantee corporate loans issued by financial institutions for the Company and its subsidiaries’ customers and unrelated third parties. The Company and its subsidiaries are obliged to pay the outstanding loans when the guaranteed parties fail to pay principal and/or interest in accordance with the contract terms. In some cases, the corporate loans are secured by the guaranteed parties’ operating assets. Once the Company and its subsidiaries assume the guaranteed parties’ obligation, the Company and its subsidiaries acquire the right of the collateral. In other cases, certain contracts that guarantee corporate loans issued by financial institutions for unrelated third parties include contracts that the amounts of performance guarantee are limited to a range of guarantee commissions, if certain conditions are met. Total amounts of such guarantee and guarantee commissions are ¥73,500 million ($684 million) and ¥1,293 million ($12 million) as of March 31,2005, respectively.

 

Other guarantees: Other guarantees include the guarantees derived from collection agency agreements. Pursuant to the agreements, the Company collects third parties’ debt and pays the uncovered amounts.

 

Litigation—The Company and its subsidiaries are involved in legal proceedings and claims in the ordinary course of their business. In the opinion of management, none of such proceedings and claims will have a significant impact on the Company’s financial position or results of operations.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

30. Segment Information

 

The following table presents segment financial information on the basis that is regularly used by management for evaluating segment performance and deciding how to allocate resources. The reportable segments are identified based on the nature of services for operations in Japan and on the basis of geographic area for overseas operations. With respect to the corporate financial services segment and real estate-related finance in operations in Japan segment, the Company and its subsidiaries aggregate some operating segments that are determined by region and type of operating assets for management purposes because they are similar in the nature of the services, the type of customers and the economic environment.

 

Corporate financial services operations are primarily corporate direct financing leases and lending operations other than real estate related lending. Automobile operations comprise automobile leasing operations and automobile rental operations. Rental operations comprise operating leases over measuring equipment and information-related equipment. Real estate-related finance operations include corporate real estate financing activities as well as personal housing loan lending operations. Real estate operations primarily comprise residential subdivision developments, office buildings development and sales as well as the rental and management of office buildings, golf courses, hotels and a training facility. Life insurance operations include direct and agency life insurance sales and related activities. The two overseas operating segments, the Americas and Asia, Oceania and Europe, include direct financing lease operations, investment in debt securities, collateralized real estate lending and aircraft and ship financing operations. Other operations, which are not deemed by management to be sufficiently significant to disclose as separate items and do not fall into the above segment categories, are reported under operations in Japan, other. They primarily include securities brokerage, venture capital operations, card loans and corporate rehabilitation business.

 

Effective January 1, 2005, the Company integrated seven group companies, which were involved in automobile leasing and rental operations, into ORIX Auto Corporation, in order to control and manage the overall automobile operations under one company. The automobile leasing operations, which had been included in the “Corporate Financial Services” segment and the automobile rental operations that had been included in the “Rental Operations” segment were included in the “Automobile Operations” segment from this fiscal year. The “Rental Operations” segment now includes only the rental operations of precision measuring and information-related equipment. The Company had managed the “Europe” segment as an independent operating segment apart from the “Asia and Oceania” segment. Due to the downsizing of the business operation in the Europe area, the Company reviewed its business management policy and consequently, the management decided to integrate the “Europe” segment into the “Asia and Oceania” segment. From this fiscal year the new segment is shown as the “Asia, Oceania and Europe” segment. Accordingly, certain amounts in fiscal 2003 and 2004 have been reclassified retroactively to conform to the fiscal 2005 presentation.

 

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

Financial information of the segments for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005 is as follows:

 

    Millions of yen

    Operations in Japan

  Overseas operations

 

Total


Year ended March 31, 2003    


  Corporate
financial
services


    Automobile
operations


  Rental
operations


   

Real estate

-related
finance


   

Real

estate


    Life
insurance


  Other

  The
Americas


    Asia,
Oceania
and Europe


 

Revenues

  ¥ 82,059     ¥ 66,215   ¥ 68,162     ¥ 52,548     ¥ 110,092     ¥ 138,511   ¥ 61,240   ¥ 61,643     ¥ 75,005   ¥ 715,475

Interest revenue

    18,623       20     8       28,991       414       —       41,474     30,460       11,232     131,222

Interest expense

    15,281       3,165     1,177       6,303       2,122       86     3,453     18,808       16,855     67,250

Depreciation and amortization

    21,727       15,759     39,642       3,048       4,487       75     4,077     2,880       23,428     115,123

Other significant non-cash items:

                                                                     

Provision for doubtful receivables and probable loan losses

    18,004       485     2,373       8,499       4       108     14,195     8,173       2,865     54,706

Write-downs of long-lived assets

    —         —       —         —         50,682       —       —               —       50,682

Increase in policy liabilities

    —         —       —         —         —         5,889     —       —         —       5,889

Equity in net income (loss) of and gains (losses) on sales of affiliates

    (73 )     —       —         561       2       —       3,168     4,433       1,202     9,293

Discontinued operations

    (9 )     —       —         280       856       72     —       (297 )     —       902

Segment profit (loss)

    27,560       17,775     3,225       19,572       (39,441 )     4,791     8,452     1,332       9,029     52,295

Segment assets

    1,525,968       385,385     126,466       931,513       303,838       579,805     387,978     618,148       513,081     5,372,182

Long-lived assets

    17,740       39,566     77,679       86,247       207,821       18,350     216     70,784       116,830     635,233

Expenditures for long-lived assets

    167       27,335     47,835       5,201       30,106       327     —       907       28,529     140,407

Investment in affiliates

    161       22     —         13,118       —         —       40,636     27,866       49,373     131,176
    Millions of yen

    Operations in Japan

  Overseas operations

 

Total


Year ended March 31, 2004    


  Corporate
financial
services


    Automobile
operations


  Rental
operations


   

Real estate

-related
finance


   

Real

estate


    Life
insurance


  Other

  The
Americas


    Asia,
Oceania
and Europe


 

Revenues

  ¥ 80,418     ¥ 72,614   ¥ 73,235     ¥ 56,804     ¥ 148,217     ¥ 133,391   ¥ 73,987   ¥ 50,373     ¥ 71,176   ¥ 760,215

Interest revenue

    17,944       10     6       32,099       381       —       38,691     18,206       8,896     116,233

Interest expense

    15,082       2,561     1,408       6,335       2,346       87     3,138     12,598       13,823     57,378

Depreciation and amortization

    21,958       17,966     41,682       4,262       4,194       73     2,805     2,735       22,813     118,488

Other significant non-cash items:

                                                                     

Provision for doubtful receivables and probable loan losses

    16,009       2,218     (249 )     6,870       86       912     16,729     4,476       2,541     49,592

Write-downs of long-lived assets

    143       —       —         —         8,052       —       —       3,019       —       11,214

Decrease in policy liabilities

    —         —       —         —         —         15,771     —       —         —       15,771

Equity in net income (loss) of and gains (losses) on sales of affiliates

    (61 )     12     —         475       12       —       3,144     4,369       9,595     17,546

Discontinued operations

    29       —       —         1,661       855       58     —       2,313       —       4,916

Segment profit

    27,150       17,921     8,058       18,102       6,244       5,382     10,079     7,601       16,596     117,133

Segment assets

    1,416,117       418,412     119,388       909,019       309,558       582,473     412,505     472,595       469,675     5,109,742

Long-lived assets

    18,189       76,480     78,198       71,006       192,969       25,225     786     60,208       108,051     631,112

Expenditures for long-lived assets

    2,813       33,156     47,512       12,458       40,410       8,090     1     8,384       30,946     183,770

Investment in affiliates

    99       35     —         (676 )     634       12,852     50,568     26,778       58,888     149,178

 

F-67


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

 

    Millions of yen

    Operations in Japan

  Overseas operations

 

Total


Year ended March 31, 2005    


  Corporate
financial
services


  Automobile
operations


    Rental
operations


 

Real estate

-related
finance


   

Real

estate


  Life
insurance


  Other

  The
Americas


    Asia,
Oceania
and Europe


 

Revenues

  ¥ 87,708   ¥ 89,404     ¥ 68,447   ¥ 100,567     ¥ 172,728   ¥ 136,857   ¥ 143,754   ¥ 53,084     ¥ 73,089   ¥ 925,638

Interest revenue

    25,043     7       7     47,136       301     1     37,245     18,359       8,139     136,238

Interest expense

    12,760     2,835       1,042     7,262       3,495     90     3,734     10,408       13,278     54,904

Depreciation and amortization

    23,010     26,613       41,936     3,548       4,859     94     5,006     3,154       23,240     131,460

Other significant non-cash items:

                                                                 

Provision for doubtful receivables and probable loan losses

    10,529     (129 )     63     16,697       290     113     9,971     1,498       542     39,574

Write-downs of long-lived assets

    —       —         —       768       1,318     —       —       1,879       —       3,965

Decrease in policy liabilities

    —       —         —       —         —       41,902     —       —         —       41,902

Equity in net income (loss) of and gains (losses) on sales of affiliates

    350     6       —       (735 )     984     1,406     11,511     (1,546 )     11,150     23,126

Discontinued operations

    121     —         —       3,298       2,819     250     —       3,549       —       10,037

Segment profit

    43,848     21,088       9,384     22,269       15,546     7,223     20,970     15,621       22,133     178,082

Segment assets

    1,506,311     451,715       118,427     1,106,548       350,254     567,023     489,758     403,399       498,855     5,492,290

Long-lived assets

    17,105     103,316       64,881     128,564       206,426     23,508     3,224     44,898       121,553     713,475

Expenditures for long-lived assets

    662     58,157       36,279     67,098       40,615     116     23     3,071       38,512     244,533

Investment in affiliates

    943     41       —       (727 )     36,400     8,994     116,194     23,316       78,255     263,416
    Millions of U.S. dollars

    Operations in Japan

  Overseas operations

 

Total


Year ended March 31, 2005  


 

Corporate

financial

services


 

Automobile

operations


   

Rental

operations


 

Real estate

-related
finance


   

Real

estate


  Life
insurance


  Other

  The
Americas


    Asia,
Oceania and
Europe


 

Revenues

  $ 817   $ 833     $ 637   $ 936     $ 1,608   $ 1,274   $ 1,339   $ 494     $ 681   $ 8,619

Interest revenue

    233     0       0     439       3     0     347     171       76     1,269

Interest expense

    118     26       10     68       32     1     35     97       124     511

Depreciation and amortization

    214     248       391     33       45     1     47     29       216     1,224

Other significant non-cash items:

                                                                 

Provision for doubtful receivables and probable loan losses

    98     (1 )     1     155       3     1     93     14       5     369

Write-downs of long-lived assets

    —       —         —       7       12     —       —               —       37

Decrease in policy liabilities

    —       —         —       —         —       390     —       —         —       390

Equity in net income (loss) of and gains (losses) on sales of affiliates

    3     0       —       (7 )     9     13     107     (14 )     104     215

Discontinued operations

    1     —         —       31       26     2     —               —       93

Segment profit

    408     196       87     207       145     67     197     145       206     1,658

Segment assets

    14,027     4,206       1,103     10,304       3,262     5,280     4,560     3,756       4,645     51,143

Long-lived assets

    160     962       604     1,197       1,922     219     30     418       1,132     6,644

Expenditures for long-lived assets

    6     541       338     625       378     1     0     29       359     2,277

Investment in affiliates

    9     0       —       (7 )     339     84     1,082     217       729     2,453

 

F-68


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

The accounting policies of the segments are almost the same as those described in Note 1 (“Significant Accounting and Reporting Policies”) except for the treatment of income tax expenses. Since the Company and its subsidiaries evaluate performance for the segments based on profit or loss before income taxes, tax expenses are not included in segment profit or loss. Minority interest income and discontinued operations, which are recognized net of tax, are adjusted to profit or loss before income tax. Gains and losses that management does not consider for evaluating the performance of the segments, such as write-downs of certain securities, certain foreign exchange gains or losses and write-downs of certain long-lived assets, are excluded from the segment profit or loss and are regarded as corporate items.

 

Assets attributed to each segment are consolidated operating assets (investment in direct financing leases, installment loans, investment in operating leases, investment in securities and other operating assets), inventories, advances for investment in operating leases (included in other assets) and investment in affiliates (not including loans). This has resulted in depreciation of office facilities being included in each segment’s profit or loss while the carrying amounts of corresponding assets are not allocated to each segment’s asset. However, the effect resulting from this allocation is not significant.

 

The reconciliation of segment totals to consolidated financial statement amounts is as follows. Significant items to be reconciled are revenues, segment profit and segment assets. Other items do not have a significant difference between segment amounts and consolidated amounts.

 

     Millions of yen

   

Millions of

U.S. dollars


 
     2003

    2004

    2005

    2005

 

Revenues:

                                

Total revenues for segments

   ¥ 715,475     ¥ 760,215     ¥ 925,638     $ 8,619  

Revenue related to corporate assets

     7,993       6,287       5,184       49  

Revenue from discontinued operations

     (4,578 )     (9,832 )     (13,872 )     (129 )
    


 


 


 


Total consolidated revenues

   ¥ 718,890     ¥ 756,670     ¥ 916,950     $ 8,539  
    


 


 


 


Segment profit:

                                

Total profit for segments

   ¥ 52,295     ¥ 117,133     ¥ 178,082     $ 1,658  

Corporate interest expenses, general and administrative expenses

     (5,403 )     (7,975 )     (3,957 )     (37 )

Corporate write-downs of securities

     (3,408 )     (2,637 )     (816 )     (8 )

Corporate write-downs of long-lived assets

     —         (1,131 )     (7,748 )     (72 )

Corporate other gain or loss

     2,804       1,480       (1,177 )     (11 )

Discontinued operations

     (902 )     (4,916 )     (10,037 )     (93 )
    


 


 


 


Total consolidated income before discontinued operations, extraordinary gain, cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle and income taxes

   ¥ 45,386     ¥ 101,954     ¥ 154,347     $ 1,437  
    


 


 


 


Segment assets:

                                

Total assets for segments

   ¥ 5,372,182     ¥ 5,109,742     ¥ 5,492,290     $ 51,143  

Cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash and time deposits

     224,532       188,533       207,251       1,930  

Allowance for doubtful receivables on direct financing leases and probable loan losses

     (133,146 )     (128,020 )     (115,250 )     (1,073 )

Other receivables

     146,650       142,711       160,263       1,492  

Other corporate assets

     320,849       311,991       324,399       3,021  
    


 


 


 


Total consolidated assets

   ¥ 5,931,067     ¥ 5,624,957     ¥ 6,068,953     $ 56,513  
    


 


 


 


 

F-69


Table of Contents

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS—(Continued)

 

ORIX Corporation and its Subsidiaries

 

FASB Statement No. 131 (“Disclosure about Segments of an Enterprise and Related Information”) requires disclosure of information about geographic areas as enterprise-wide information. Since each segment is identified based on the nature of services for domestic operations and on the bases of geographic area for overseas operations, the information required is incorporated into the table. Japan and the United States of America are the countries whose revenues from external customers are significant. Almost all the revenues of the Americas segment are derived from the United States of America. The basis for attributing revenues from external customers to individual countries is principally the location of the foreign subsidiaries and foreign affiliates.

 

FASB Statement No. 131 requires disclosure of revenues from external customers for each product and service as enterprise-wide information. The consolidated statements of income in which the revenues are categorized based on the nature of the types of business conducted include the required information. No single customer accounted for 10% or more of the total revenues for fiscal 2003, 2004 and 2005.

 

F-70


Table of Contents

Schedule II. – Valuation and Qualifying Accounts and Reserves

 

ORIX Corporation and Subsidiaries

 

For the year ended March 31, 2003

 

     Millions of yen

Description


  

Balance at

beginning of

period


  

Addition:

Charged to

costs and

expenses


   Deduction

   

Translation

Adjustment


   

Balance at end

of period


Restructuring cost:

                                    

Closed office lease obligations

   ¥ 365    ¥ 93    ¥ (239 )   ¥ (32 )   ¥ 187

Disposal of equipment

     —        —        —         —         —  

Severance and other benefits to terminated employees

     216      —        (178 )     (18 )     20

Other closure, employee and professional costs

     110      —        (79 )     (10 )     21

Total

   ¥ 691    ¥ 93    ¥ (496 )   ¥ (60 )   ¥ 228
    

  

  


 


 

Deferred Tax Assets: Valuation Allowance

   ¥ 10,733    ¥ 3,007    ¥ (410 )   ¥ (185 )   ¥ 13,145

 

For the year ended March 31, 2004

 

     Millions of yen

Description


  

Balance at

beginning of

period


  

Addition:

Charged to

costs and

expenses


   Deduction

   

Translation

Adjustment


   

Balance at end

of period


Restructuring cost:

                                    

Closed office lease obligations

   ¥ 187    ¥ 421    ¥ (146 )   ¥ (15 )   ¥ 447

Disposal of equipment

     —        44      (31 )     (1 )     12

Severance and other benefits to terminated employees

     20      204      (137 )     (6 )     81

Other closure, employee and professional costs

     21      133      (84 )     —         70

Total

   ¥ 228    ¥ 802    ¥ (398 )   ¥ (22 )   ¥ 610
    

  

  


 


 

Deferred Tax Assets: Valuation Allowance

   ¥ 13,145    ¥ 3,514    ¥ (2,495 )   ¥ (256 )   ¥ 13,908

 

For the year ended March 31, 2005

 

     Millions of yen

Description


  

Balance at

beginning of

period


  

Addition:

Charged to

costs and

expenses


   Deduction

   

Translation

Adjustment


  

Balance at end

of period


Restructuring cost:

                                   

Closed office lease obligations

   ¥ 447    ¥ 583    ¥ (390 )   ¥ 20    ¥ 660

Disposal of equipment

     12      —        (12 )     —        —  

Severance and other benefits to terminated employees

     81      78      (147 )     2      14

Other closure, employee and professional costs

     70      —        (72 )     2      —  

Total

   ¥ 610    ¥ 661    ¥ (621 )   ¥ 24    ¥ 674
    

  

  


 

  

Deferred Tax Assets: Valuation Allowance

   ¥ 13,908    ¥ 1,158    ¥ (5,118 )   ¥ 88    ¥ 10,036

 

F-71


Table of Contents

Signature

 

The registrant hereby certifies that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form 20-F and that it has duly caused and authorized the undersigned to sign this annual report on its behalf.

 

ORIX KABUSHIKI KAISHA
By:  

/S/ MASARU HATTORI


    Name:     Masaru Hattori
    Title:       Corporate Senior Vice President

 

Date: August 22, 2005