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Japan's biggest bank MUFJ surges past 1 trillion yen profit mark

A businessman walks past a Mitsubishi UFJ branch in Tokyo, on May 15, 2015, as the bank said it would spend 100 billion yen on a share buyback scheme

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFJ) said Friday that its annual net profit passed the 1.0 trillion yen mark, a first for any Japanese lender, while top rivals Mizuho and Sumitomo saw their bottom line shrink.

The whopping earnings for the fiscal year to March -- $8.6 billion -- saw Japan's biggest bank cash in on an expansion of its business overseas and the purchase of a Thai bank, countering sluggish lending at home.

Mitsubishi's gains were "mainly due to increases in net interest income from overseas loan businesses and net fees and commissions from sales of investment products and investment banking," it said.

The bank, which said it would spend 100 billion yen on a share buyback, also cited the impact of its acquisition of Thailand's Bank of Ayudhya for the boost to its earnings.

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Toyota, the world's biggest automaker, is the only other Japanese firm to have surpassed the 1.0 trillion yen profit mark, according to the Nikkei business daily, but Mitsubishi said its earnings were likely to shrink back to 950 billion yen this year.

MUFJ's profits linked to securities trading were smaller than those in the previous fiscal year as Tokyo's benchmark Nikkei 225 index rallied a hefty 57 percent in 2013 -- its best annual performance in decades.

The rise came as the yen weakened sharply on the back of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's policies to revive the economy, dubbed "Abenomics," which enticed retail customers into the stock market.

But last year, the Nikkei climbed a more modest 7.1 percent.

Japanese banks hold vast stock holdings which have allowed them to get involved in management of their borrowers and benefitted them when overseas investors poured billions of dollars into the long-overlooked market.

Japanese lenders have relied on profits linked to securities trading and other market activities rather than bread-and-butter domestic lending, as they struggle to find borrowers despite the Bank of Japan's efforts to pump money into the economy.

Many nervous firms have been sitting on huge cash piles since a sales tax hike in April last year dented economic growth, while consumer sentiment also remains shaky.

Also Friday, Mizuho Financial Group said its net profit fell 11.1 percent to 611.9 billion yen for the fiscal year as the benefits from a shrinking bad-loan provision were smaller than that a year earlier.

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group on Wednesday reported that its net profit shrank 9.8 percent to 753.6 billion yen.

Mizuho and Sumitomo, however, forecast bigger net profits of 630.0 billion yen and 760.0 billion yen respectively for the current fiscal year to March 2016.