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Mizuho stock tumble after 660% profit jump: what's rattling investors?

Mizuho stock tumble after 660% profit jump: what's rattling investors?
Devesh Kumar
May 17, 2026, 23:44 PM

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Mizuho Financial (8306.T)

Buy. The selloff is driven by uncertainty over a possible Rakuten-related capital move, not by deteriorating earnings. Mizuho still delivered record profits, raised guidance, and announced a 100bn yen buyback—classic support for downside. The “no decision yet” response removes the immediate deal risk, so the stock should mean-revert as headlines cool.

Key Risk: Mizuho confirms a large, expensive Rakuten investment that forces capital deployment and compresses returns.

Rakuten Bank/Fintech exposure (Rakuten Group, 4755.T)

Sell. The market is already pricing a long runway of valuation and control fights inside Rakuten’s fintech reshuffle. Any Mizuho involvement raises the stakes, but it also highlights that reorganizations are still unresolved (roles/ownership undecided). That keeps discount-rate and execution risk high for Rakuten’s equity.

Key Risk: Rakuten successfully finalizes the reorg with clear ownership terms and credible profitability path, triggering a valuation rerating.

  • Mizuho posted a record 1.25 trillion yen annual profit.
  • Shares fell nearly 7% after Rakuten Bank investment reports.
  • Rakuten’s fintech restructuring remains targeted for October 2026.

Mizuho Financial Group delivered a strong result as quarterly profit for January–March surged to 228.7 billion yen from 30.1 billion yen a year earlier, and full-year net profit reached a record 1.25 trillion yen.

Yet the stock market did not reward the performance.

On Monday, Mizuho shares fell sharply after a weekend media report sparked fresh questions about the bank’s next move in Rakuten’s fintech empire.

The investors started selling on the uncertainty around what Mizuho might do with its capital next.

Record profits, but the market isn’t celebrating

The earnings backdrop was undeniably strong as Mizuho’s annual profit rose 41% to 1.25 trillion yen, with the bank crediting three Bank of Japan rate hikes since March 2024.

The bank is riding on the wave of stronger lending margins and healthy loan demand tied to Japan’s post-deflation recovery and corporate M&A activity.

Mizuho also said its domestic loan balance and loan-deposit margin improved, and it lifted its profit outlook for the current fiscal year to a 4% increase, which implies roughly 1.3 trillion yen.

The bank also announced a 100 billion yen share buyback, a sign that management wanted to underline confidence even as global risks stayed in view.

That is what makes the selloff so striking, as strong numbers, a higher outlook and a buyback would normally point to a favorable read-through for shareholders.

Instead, the move in Mizuho suggested the market had already shifted its attention away from the earnings line and toward a separate strategic question: how much capital the bank might commit to Rakuten’s reshuffling of fintech assets.

One big question mark

The catalyst was not the earnings release itself, but a report in the Japanese press over the weekend that Mizuho was considering an investment in Rakuten Bank.

Mizuho answered quickly on Sunday, saying some media outlets had reported on the matter, but that the company had not announced any such investment and had not made a decision.

In the same note, it said it would disclose any relevant information at the appropriate time.

That kind of half-step is often enough to unsettle investors, as it does not confirm a deal, but it also does not remove the possibility.

Mizuho tumbled nearly 7% after the reports circulated.

The underlying concern is that Mizuho has already built meaningful exposure to Rakuten’s financial arm, and any new move would raise the question of price, timing and whether fresh capital is being deployed into a business that is still being reorganized.

Mizuho Securities already owns 49% of Rakuten Securities, while Mizuho Bank holds 14.99% of Rakuten Card.

Japan’s fintech reshuffle

Rakuten has already been trying to reorganize its fintech operations, with a plan to bring Rakuten Bank, Rakuten Card and Rakuten Securities under one structure.

Rakuten’s February disclosure said the exact role of Mizuho Bank and Mizuho Securities in that reorganization remained undecided.

The target remains October 2026, which gives the market a long runway to speculate on valuations, ownership and control.

For Mizuho, the attraction is clear with more reach in digital banking and payments, plus deeper access to a large retail ecosystem.

But the investors may like the strategic logic, yet still dislike the price tag.