Fuji Media Holdings, Inc. (TYO:4676)
3,629.00
+1.00 (0.03%)
Feb 10, 2026, 3:30 PM JST
Fuji Media Holdings Revenue
Fuji Media Holdings had revenue of 143.71B JPY in the quarter ending December 31, 2025, a decrease of -1.01%. This brings the company's revenue in the last twelve months to 529.88B, down -6.99% year-over-year. In the fiscal year ending March 31, 2025, Fuji Media Holdings had annual revenue of 550.76B, down -2.77%.
Revenue (ttm)
529.88B
Revenue Growth
-6.99%
P/S Ratio
1.00
Revenue / Employee
72.57M
Employees
7,302
Market Cap
527.61B
Revenue Chart
Revenue History
| Fiscal Year End | Revenue | Change | Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 31, 2025 | 550.76B | -15.68B | -2.77% |
| Mar 31, 2024 | 566.44B | 30.80B | 5.75% |
| Mar 31, 2023 | 535.64B | 10.55B | 2.01% |
| Mar 31, 2022 | 525.09B | 5.15B | 0.99% |
| Mar 31, 2021 | 519.94B | -111.54B | -17.66% |
| Mar 31, 2020 | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro |
| Mar 31, 2019 | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro |
| Mar 31, 2018 | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro |
| Mar 31, 2017 | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro |
| Mar 31, 2016 | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro | Upgrade Pro |
Revenue Definition
Revenue, also called sales, is the amount of money a company receives from its business activities, such as sales of products or services. Revenue does not take any expenses into account and is therefore different from profits.
Full DefinitionRelated Stocks
| Company Name | Revenue |
|---|---|
| Nippon Television Holdings | 487.04B |
| TBS Holdings,Inc. | 423.05B |
| TV Asahi Holdings | 335.78B |
| TV TOKYO Holdings | 162.03B |
| SKY Perfect JSAT Holdings | 125.19B |
| Asahi Broadcasting Group Holdings | 96.95B |
| Wowow | 77.44B |
| Space Shower Skiyaki Holdings | 21.96B |
Fuji Media Holdings News
- 6 days ago - Fuji Media Holdings (FJTNY) Shares Plummet Amid Share Buyback and Stake Sale - GuruFocus
- 6 days ago - Fuji Media tumbles after large buyback plan, activist-linked stake sales - Seeking Alpha
- 1 year ago - Fuji Media in crisis as advertisers flee over TV star scandal - Financial Times