Annual Report
Table of Contents

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington D.C. 20549

 


 

FORM 20-F

 


 

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 13 OR 15(d)

OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2004

 

Commission file number 1 - 6784

 


 

MATSUSHITA DENKI SANGYO KABUSHIKI KAISHA

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)

 


 

MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

(Translation of Registrant’s name into English)

 


 

Japan

(Jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

 

1006, Oaza Kadoma, Kadoma-shi, Osaka 571-8501, 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


American Depositary Shares*   New York Stock Exchange

Common Stock

  New York Stock Exchange

 

* American Depositary Shares evidenced by American Depositary Receipts. Each American Depositary Share represents one share of Common Stock.

 

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 (excluding treasury stocks) of each of the issuer’s classes of capital or common stock as of the close of the period covered by the annual report.

 

     Outstanding as of

Title of Class


  

March 31, 2004

(Japan Time)


   March 31, 2004
(New York Time)


Common Stock

   2,318,407,612     

American Depositary Shares, each representing 1 share of common stock

        103,593,084

 

Indicate by check mark whether the Company (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Sections 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Company 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 Company has elected to follow.

Item 17.  ¨    Item 18.  x.

 

This form contains 154 pages.

 



Table of Contents

CONTENTS

 

             Page

Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

   1

About the Company

   1
    PART I     

Item 1.

 

Identity of Directors, Senior Management and Advisers

   2

Item 2.

 

Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable

   2

Item 3.

 

Key Information

   2
   

A.

 

Selected Financial Data

   2
    B.  

Capitalization and Indebtedness

   3
    C.  

Reasons for the Offer and Use of Proceeds

   3
    D.  

Risk Factors

   3

Item 4.

 

Information on the Company

   10
   

A.

 

History and Development of the Company

   10
    B.  

Business Overview

   15
    C.  

Organizational Structure

   29
    D.  

Property, Plants and Equipment

   30

Item 5.

 

Operating and Financial Review and Prospects

   32
   

A.

 

Operating Results

   32
    B.  

Liquidity and Capital Resources

   43
    C.  

Research and Development

   46
    D.  

Trend Information

   47
    E.  

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

   49
    F.  

Tabular Disclosure of Contractual Obligations

   49
    G.  

Safe Harbor

   50
    H.  

Accounting Principles

   50

Item 6.

 

Directors, Senior Management and Employees

   54
   

A.

 

Directors and Senior Management

   54
   

B.

 

Compensation

   63
   

C.

 

Board Practices

   63
    D.  

Employees

   64
    E.  

Share Ownership

   65

 


Table of Contents
             Page

Item 7.

 

Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions

   67
   

A.

 

Major Shareholders

   67
   

B.

 

Related Party Transactions

   68
   

C.

 

Interests of Experts and Counsel

   68

Item 8.

 

Financial Information

   69
   

A.

 

Consolidated Statements and Other Financial Information

   69
   

B.

 

Significant Changes

   69

Item 9.

 

The Offer and Listing

   70
   

A.

 

Offer and Listing Details

   70
   

B.

 

Plan of Distribution

   71
   

C.

 

Markets

   71
   

D.

 

Selling Shareholders

   71
   

E.

 

Dilution

   72
   

F.

 

Expenses of the Issue

   72

Item 10.

 

Additional Information

   72
   

A.

 

Share Capital

   72
   

B.

 

Memorandum and Articles of Association

   72
   

C.

 

Material Contracts

   82
   

D.

 

Exchange Controls

   83
   

E.

 

Taxation

   84
   

F.

 

Dividends and Paying Agents

   89
   

G.

 

Statement by Experts

   90
   

H.

 

Documents on Display

   90
   

I.

 

Subsidiary Information

   90

Item 11.

 

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

   90

Item 12.

 

Description of Securities Other than Equity Securities

   93
    PART II     

Item 13.

 

Defaults, Dividend Arrearages and Delinquencies

   94

Item 14.

 

Material Modifications to the Rights of Security Holders and Use of Proceeds

   94

Item 15.

 

Controls and Procedures

   94

 


Table of Contents
             Page

Item 16A.

 

Audit Committee Financial Expert

   94

Item 16B.

 

Code of Ethics

   94

Item 16C.

 

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

   95

Item 16D.

 

Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit Committees

   96

Item 16E.

 

Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers

   96
    PART III     

Item 17.

 

Financial Statements

   97

Item 18.

 

Financial Statements

   97

Item 19.

 

Exhibits

   153

 


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- 1 -

 

All information contained in this Report is as of March 31, 2004 or for the year ended March 31, 2004 (fiscal 2004) unless the context otherwise indicates.

 

The noon buying rate for yen in New York City as certified for customs purposes by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on August 25, 2004 was 110.38 yen = U.S.$1.

 

Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

 

This annual report includes forward–looking statements (within the meaning of Section 27A of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934) about Matsushita and its Group companies (the Matsushita Group). To the extent that statements in this annual report do not relate to historical or current facts, they constitute forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are based on the current assumptions and beliefs of the Matsushita Group in light of the information currently available to it, and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors. Such risks, uncertainties and other factors may cause the Matsushita Group’s actual results, performance, achievements or financial position to be materially different from any future results, performance, achievements or financial position expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Matsushita undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements after the date of this annual report (September 2004). Investors are advised to consult any further disclosures by Matsushita in its subsequent filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and its other filings.

 

The risks, uncertainties and other factors referred to above include, but are not limited to, economic conditions, particularly consumer spending and corporate capital expenditures in the United States, Europe, Japan and other Asian countries; volatility in demand for electronic equipment and components from business and industrial customers, as well as consumers in many product and geographical markets; currency rate fluctuations, notably between the yen, the U.S. dollar, the euro, Asian currencies and other currencies in which the Matsushita Group operates businesses, or in which assets and liabilities of the Matsushita Group are denominated; the ability of the Matsushita Group to respond to rapid technological changes and changing consumer preferences with timely and cost-effective introductions of new products in markets that are highly competitive in terms of both price and technology; the ability of the Matsushita Group to achieve its business objectives through joint ventures and other collaborative agreements with other companies; the ability of the Matsushita Group to maintain competitive strength in many product and geographical areas; current and potential, direct and indirect restrictions imposed by other countries over trade, manufacturing, labor and operations; and fluctuations in market prices of securities and other assets in which the Matsushita Group has holdings; as well as future changes or revisions to accounting policies or accounting rules.

 

About the Company

 

Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. (hereinafter, unless the context otherwise requires, “Matsushita” or the “Company” refers to Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. and its consolidated subsidiaries as a group), best known for its “Panasonic” brand name, is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of electronic and electric products for a wide range of consumer, business and industrial uses, as well as a wide variety of components. Based in Osaka, Japan, the Company recorded consolidated net sales of approximately 7,480 billion yen for fiscal 2004. Over the past eight decades, the Company has grown from a small domestic household electrical equipment manufacturer into a comprehensive electronic and electric equipment, systems and components manufacturer operating internationally. Of the fiscal 2004 net sales, nearly one-half was represented by sales in Japan, with the rest by overseas sales.


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- 2 -

 

PART I

 

Item 1. Identity of Directors, Senior Management and Advisers

 

Not applicable

 

Item 2. Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable

 

Not applicable

 

Item 3. Key Information

 

A. Selected Financial Data

 

     Yen (billions), except per share amounts and yen exchange rates

 
     Fiscal year ended March 31,

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

    2001

    2000

 

Income Statement Data:

                              

Net sales

   7,480     7,402     7,074     7,781     7,405  

Income (loss) before income taxes

   171     69     (538 )   105     248  

Net income (loss)

   42     (19 )   (428 )   42     106  

Per common share:

                              

Net income (loss):

                              

Basic

   18.15     (8.70 )   (206.09 )   19.96     51.49  

Diluted

   18.00     (8.70 )   (206.09 )   19.56     49.32  

Dividends

   12.50     10.00     12.50     12.50     14.00  
     ($0.109 )   ($0.107 )   ($0.100 )   ($0.116 )   ($0.125 )

Balance Sheet Data:

                              

Total assets

   7,438     7,835     7,768     8,295     8,076  

Long-term debt

   461     588     708     563     662  

Stockholders’ equity

   3,452     3,178     3,248     3,770     3,678  

Common stock

   259     259     259     211     210  

Number of shares issued at year-end (thousands)

   2,453,053     2,447,923     2,138,515     2,079,573     2,062,671  

Yen exchange rates per U.S. dollar:

                              

Year-end

   104.18     118.07     132.70     125.54     102.73  

Average

   113.08     121.96     125.05     110.60     111.35  

High

   104.18     115.71     115.89     104.19     101.53  

Low

   120.55     133.40     134.77     125.54     124.45  

 

     Feb.
2004


   Mar.
2004


   Apr.
2004


   May
2004


   Jun.
2004


   Jul.
2004


Yen exchange rates for each month during the previous six months:

                             

High

   105.36    104.18    103.70    108.50    107.10    108.21

Low

   109.59    112.12    110.37    114.30    111.27    111.88


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Note:    Dividends per share reflect those paid during each fiscal year. The dollar amounts of the dividends per share have been computed at the exchange rates on the respective payment dates.

 

B. Capitalization and Indebtedness

 

Not applicable

 

C. Reasons for the Offer and Use of Proceeds

 

Not applicable

 

D. Risk Factors

 

Primarily because of the business areas and geographical areas where it operates and the highly competitive nature of the industry to which it belongs, Matsushita is exposed to a variety of risks and uncertainties in carrying out its businesses, including, but not limited to, the following:

 

Risks Related to Economic Conditions

 

 

Weakness in Japanese and global economies may cause reduced demand for the products of Matsushita

 

Demand for Matsushita’s products and services may be affected by general economic trends in the countries or regions in which Matsushita’s products and services are sold. Economic downturns and resulting declines in demand in Matsushita’s major markets worldwide may thus adversely affect the Company’s business results and financial condition. Although Matsushita continued to achieve improvements in its business performance in fiscal 2004, it currently does not foresee a rapid turnaround in the Japanese or global economy in the near term given the limited recovery in consumer spending. These conditions may continue in the short- to mid-term, thereby further negatively affecting Matsushita’s businesses. Furthermore, if Japanese and global economies fall into stagnation, resulting decreased demand and slowdown in capital investment may adversely affect Matsushita’s overall business.

 

Currency exchange rate fluctuations could adversely affect Matsushita’s financial results

 

Matsushita is exposed to risks of foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations. Matsushita’s consolidated financial statements, which are presented in Japanese yen, are affected by foreign exchange rate changes. These changes affect Matsushita’s international business transactions and costs and prices of Matsushita’s products and services in overseas countries in relation to the yen. They can also affect the yen value of Matsushita’s investments in overseas assets and liabilities. Generally, an appreciation of the yen against other major currencies such as the U.S. dollar and the euro may adversely affect Matsushita’s business results and financial condition. Meanwhile, a depreciation of the yen against aforementioned major currencies may have a favorable impact on Matsushita’s business results and financial condition. Although Matsushita is taking measures to reduce or hedge against foreign currency exchange risks, foreign exchange rate fluctuations may hurt its businesses, results of operations and financial condition.


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- 4 -

 

Interest rate fluctuations may adversely affect Matsushita’s financial results

 

Matsushita is exposed to the risk of interest rate fluctuations, which, despite the measures taken by Matsushita to hedge a portion of its exposure to interest rate fluctuations, may affect its overall operational costs, interest expense, interest income and the value of its financial assets and liabilities.

 

The decrease in the value of Japanese stocks may adversely affect Matsushita’s financial results

 

Matsushita holds mostly Japanese stocks as part of its investment securities. The value of most of these stocks, however, dropped substantially over the past several years due to the stagnant Japanese economy. Matsushita recorded a loss in valuation declines in its investment securities. The decrease in the value of stocks may continue and adversely affect Matsushita’s financial results. The decrease in the value of Japanese stocks may also reduce stockholders’ equity in the balance sheet, as unrealized holding gains (losses) of available-for-sale securities are included as part of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss).

 

Risks Related to Matsushita’s Business

 

 

Matsushita is subject to intense competition in areas in which it operates, and this may adversely affect its ability to maintain its profitability

 

Matsushita produces a broad range of products and therefore faces many different types of competitors, from large international companies to relatively small, rapidly growing, and highly specialized organizations. Matsushita may choose not to fund or invest in one or more of its businesses to the same degree as its competitors in those businesses do, or it may not be able to do so in a timely manner or at all. These competitors may have greater financial, technological, and marketing resources available to them than Matsushita has in the respective businesses in which they compete.

 

Rapid declines in product prices may adversely affect Matsushita’s financial results

 

Matsushita’s business is subject to intense price competition worldwide, which makes it difficult for the Company to decide product prices so that it can obtain adequate profits. Such intensified price competition may adversely affect Matsushita’s profits, especially when demand decreases. For the year ending March 31, 2005, Matsushita expects prices in many product areas in which it deals to decline at the same rate as, or more rapidly than, in recent fiscal years. Matsushita believes that this trend will affect its businesses, especially those in the area of its AVC Networks category and its Components and Devices category.


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Matsushita’s business is, and will continue to be, subject to the risks generally associated with international business operations

 

One of Matsushita’s business strategies is business expansion in overseas markets. In many of these markets, Matsushita may face risks generally associated with international manufacturing and other business operations, such as political instability, economic uncertainty, cultural and religious differences and labor relations, as well as foreign currency exchange risks. Matsushita may also face barriers in commercial and business customs in foreign countries, including difficulties in timely collection of accounts receivable or in building and expanding relationships with customers, subcontractors or parts suppliers. Matsushita may also experience various political, legal or other restrictions over investment, trade, manufacturing, labor or other aspects of operations, including restrictions on foreign investment or the repatriation of profits on invested capital, nationalization of local industry, changes in export or import restrictions or foreign exchange controls, and changes in the tax system or rate of taxation in countries where Matsushita operates businesses. With respect to the products exported overseas, tariffs, other barriers or shipping costs may make Matsushita’s products less competitive. Expanding its overseas business may require significant investments long before Matsushita realizes returns on such investments, and increased investments may result in expenses growing at a faster rate than revenues.

 

Matsushita may not be able to keep pace with technological changes and develop new products and services in a timely manner to remain competitive

 

Matsushita may fail to introduce new products and services in response to technological changes in a timely manner despite its efforts to develop new products and services continuously. Some of Matsushita’s core businesses, such as consumer digital electronics and key components and devices, are concentrated in industries where technological innovation is the central competitive factor. Matsushita continuously faces the challenge of developing and introducing viable and innovative new products. Matsushita must predict with reasonable accuracy both future demand and new technologies that will be available to meet such demand. If Matsushita fails to do so, it will not be able to compete in new markets.

 

Matsushita may not be able to develop product formats that can prevail as de facto standards

 

Matsushita has been forming alliances and partnerships with other major manufacturers to strengthen technologies and the development of product formats, such as next-generation home and mobile networking products, data storage devices, and software systems. Despite these efforts by Matsushita, its competitors may be the ones who develop the de facto standards for future products. If that happens, Matsushita’s business in those business areas, its results of operations and financial condition, could be adversely affected.

 

Matsushita may not be able to successfully recruit and retain skilled employees, particularly scientific and technical personnel

 

Matsushita’s future success depends largely on its ability to attract and retain certain key personnel, including scientific, technical and management personnel. Matsushita anticipates that it will need to hire additional skilled personnel in all areas of its business. Industry demand for skilled employees, however, exceeds the number of personnel available, and the competition for attracting and retaining these employees, especially scientific and technical employees, is intense. Because of this intense competition for these skilled employees, Matsushita may be unable to retain its existing personnel or attract additional qualified employees to keep up with its future business needs. If this should happen, it could adversely affect Matsushita’s future growth, results of operations and financial condition.


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The alliances with, and strategic investments in, third parties undertaken by Matsushita may not produce positive results

 

Matsushita develops its business by forming alliances or joint ventures with, and making strategic investments in, other companies, including investments in venture companies. Matsushita’s reliance on the strategy of partnering with third parties is increasing. Such partnerships are crucial to Matsushita’s goal of introducing new products and services, but Matsushita may not be able to successfully collaborate or achieve expected synergies with its partners. Matsushita does not, however, control these partners, who may make decisions regarding their business undertakings with Matsushita that may be contrary to Matsushita’s interests. In addition, if these partners change their business strategies, Matsushita may fail to maintain these partnerships.

 

Matsushita is dependent on the ability of third parties to deliver parts, components and services in adequate quality and quantity in a timely manner, and in reasonable price

 

Matsushita’s manufacturing operations depend on obtaining deliveries of raw materials, parts and components, equipment and other supplies from reliable suppliers in adequate quality and quantity in a timely manner. It may be difficult for Matsushita to substitute one supplier for another, increase suppliers or change one component for another in a timely manner or at all due to the interruption of supply or increased industry demand. This may adversely affect the Matsushita Group’s operations. Although Matsushita decides purchase prices by contract, these prices may become higher due to changes in supply and demand. Some components are only available from a limited number of suppliers and may adversely affect Matsushita’s operations. For example, Matsushita uses steel and rare metals for most of its products, and an increase in prices of these products may adversely affect Matsushita’s operating results.

 

Matsushita is exposed to the risk that its customers, including those to whom it has provided vendor financing, may encounter financial difficulties

 

Matsushita provides vendor financing to its customers. As more businesses utilize vendor financing, Matsushita may also provide increased vendor financing in the future. In addition, many of Matsushita’s customers purchase products and services from it on payment terms that do not provide for immediate payment. If customers to whom Matsushita has extended or guaranteed vendor financing, or from whom it has substantial accounts receivable, encounter financial difficulties and are unable to make payments on time, Matsushita’s business, operating results and financial condition could be adversely affected.


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Risks Related to Matsushita’s Management Plans

 

 

Matsushita has implemented its new mid-term management plan, “Leap Ahead 21,” (announced on January 9, 2004) for the three-year term ending March 2007. Matsushita’s business vision focuses on “realizing a ubiquitous networking society” and “contributing to coexistence with the global environment” through leading-edge technologies. Based on this vision, Matsushita aims to become a company that creates more value for customers. Matsushita may not be successful in achieving all the goals set out in its mid-term business plan. Furthermore, in fiscal 2004, Matsushita introduced an autonomous business domain-based organizational structure, along with a new management system that places a top priority on improving its global consolidated results and cash flows. With the objective of further enhancing profitability, Matsushita will speed up its structural reforms in several of its business domain companies. Under the management structure, Matsushita seeks to conduct its consolidated Groupwide businesses speedily and efficiently, and to achieve synergies expected from such business restructuring. Matsushita may not, however, be able to improve efficiency, reduce costs or realize growth through these measures due to unexpected additional reorganization or restructuring expenses (for restructuring expenses expected in fiscal 2005, see Section D of Item 5), improper allocation of operational resources or other unpredictable factors. Also, Matsushita has implemented its annual forecast and major initiatives (announced on April 28, 2004) for the year ending March 31, 2005. Matsushita may not be successful in achieving all the targets or in realizing the benefits expected because of external and internal factors.

 

Risks Related to Legal Restrictions and Litigations

 

 

Matsushita may be subject to product liability or warranty claims that could result in significant direct or indirect costs

 

Although Matsushita strictly follows its prescribed quality control standards for manufacturing, there is a risk that defects may occur in Matsushita’s products and services. The occurrence of defects could make Matsushita liable for damages not covered by product and completed operation liability insurance. Due to negative publicity concerning these problems, Matsushita’s reputation and corporate and brand image may be adversely affected.

 

Matsushita may fail to protect its proprietary intellectual property, or face a claim of intellectual property infringement by a third party, and may lose its intellectual property rights on key technologies or be liable for significant damages

 

Matsushita’s success depends on its ability to obtain intellectual property rights covering its products and product design. Patents may not be granted or may not be of sufficient scope or strength to provide Matsushita with enough protection or commercial advantage. In addition, effective copyright and trade secret protection may be unavailable or limited in some countries in which Matsushita operates. Competitors or other third parties may also develop technologies that are protected by patents and other intellectual property rights, which make such technologies unavailable or available only on terms unfavorable to Matsushita. Matsushita obtains licenses for intellectual property rights from others. However, such licenses may not be available at all or on acceptable terms in the future. Litigation may also be necessary to enforce Matsushita’s intellectual property rights or to defend against intellectual property infringement claims brought against Matsushita by third parties. In such cases, Matsushita may incur significant expenses for such lawsuits. Furthermore, Matsushita may become prohibited from using certain important technologies or liable for damages in cases of admitted violations of intellectual property rights of others.


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Changes in accounting standards and tax systems may adversely affect Matsushita’s financial results and condition

 

Introduction of new accounting standards or tax systems, or changes thereof, which Matsushita can not predict, may have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial results and operations. In addition, if tax authorities have different opinions from Matsushita on the Company’s tax declarations, Matsushita may need to make tax payments more than estimated.

 

Payments or compensation related to environmental regulations may adversely affect Matsushita’s business, operating results and financial condition

 

Matsushita is subject to environmental regulations such as those relating to air pollution, water pollution, elimination of hazardous substances, waste management, product recycling, and soil and groundwater contamination, and may be held responsible for certain related payments or compensation, despite its strict compliance with these regulations. Furthermore, if these regulations become more strict, the payments or compensation required for the violation of these regulations may adversely affect Matsushita’s business, operating results and financial condition.

 

Leak of confidential information may adversely affect Matsushita’s business

 

In the normal course of business, Matsushita holds confidential information, including individual information on its customers. Although Matsushita keeps confidential information with utmost care, such information may be leaked due to an accident or other inevitable cause and any material leakage of confidential information may result in significant expenses for related lawsuits and adversely affect Matsushita’s image. Moreover, Matsushita’s trade secrets may be illegally leaked by a third party, and this would negatively affect Matsushita’s business.

 

Governmental regulations may limit Matsushita’s activities or increase its operating costs

 

Matsushita is subject to governmental regulations in Japan and other countries in which it conducts its business, including governmental approvals required for conducting business and investments, laws and regulations governing the telecommunications businesses and electric product safety, national security-related laws and regulations and export/import laws and regulations, as well as commercial, antitrust, patent, product liability, environmental laws and regulations, consumer protection, financial and business taxation laws and regulations due to the implementation of stricter laws and regulations and more strict interpretations. However, to the extent that Matsushita cannot comply with these laws and regulations, Matsushita’s activities would be limited. In addition, these laws and regulations could increase Matsushita’s operating costs.

 

Other Risks

 

 

External economic conditions may adversely affect Matsushita’s pension plans

 

Matsushita has contributory, funded benefit pension plans covering substantially all employees in Japan who meet eligibility requirements. A decline in interest rates may cause a decrease in the discount rate on benefit obligations. A decrease in the value of stocks may also affect the return on plan assets. As a result, the unrecognized portion of actuarial loss may increase, leading to a future recognized actuarial loss on an increase in future net periodic benefit costs of these pension plans.


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Some long-lived assets may not produce adequate returns

 

Matsushita has many long-lived assets, such as plant, property and equipment, and goodwill, that generate returns. The Company periodically reviews the recorded value of its long-lived assets to determine if the future cash flows to be derived from these properties will be sufficient to recover the remaining recorded asset values. If these long-lived assets do not generate sufficient cash flows, impairment losses will have to be recognized, adversely affecting Matsushita’s results of operations and financial condition.

 

Financial results and condition of associated companies may adversely affect Matsushita’s results of operations and financial condition

 

Matsushita holds equities of several associated companies. Matsushita can exercise influence over operating and financing policies of these companies. However, Matsushita does not have the right to make decisions for them since the companies operate independently. Some companies may record losses. If these associated companies do not generate profits, Matsushita’s business results and financial condition may be adversely affected.

 

Matsushita’s facilities and information systems could be damaged as a result of disasters or unpredictable events, which could have an adverse effect on its business operations

 

Matsushita’s headquarters and major facilities including manufacturing plants, sales offices and research and development centers are located in Japan. In addition, Matsushita’s operations, including procurement, manufacturing, logistics, sales and research and development facilities are located all over the world. If major disasters such as earthquakes, fires, floods, wars, terrorist attacks, computer viruses or other events occur, Matsushita’s facilities may be damaged and it may have to stop or delay its production and shipment. Matsushita may incur expenses relating to such damages.

 

American Depositary Share (ADS) holders have fewer rights than shareholders and may not be able to enforce judgments based on U.S. securities laws

 

The rights of shareholders under Japanese law to take actions, including exercising their voting rights, receiving dividends and distributions, bringing derivative actions, examining Matsushita’s accounting books and records, and exercising appraisal rights are available only to shareholders of record. Because the depositary, through its nominee, is the record holder of the shares underlying the ADSs, only the depositary can exercise those rights in connection with the deposited shares. The depositary will make efforts to exercise their voting rights underlying ADSs in accordance with the instructions of ADS holders and will pay the dividends and distributions collected from Matsushita. However, ADS holders will not be able to bring a derivative action, examine Matsushita’s accounting books and records, or exercise appraisal rights through the depositary.


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Item 4. Information on the Company

 

A. History and Development of the Company

 

GENERAL

 

The Company was incorporated in Japan on December 15, 1935 under the laws of Japan as Matsushita Denki Sangyo Kabushiki Kaisha (Address : 1006, Oaza Kadoma, Kadoma-shi, Osaka 571-8501, Japan. Phone : +81-6-6908-1121 / Agent : Mr. Yukitoshi Onda, President of Panasonic Finance (America), Inc.) as the successor to an unincorporated enterprise founded in 1918 by the late Konosuke Matsushita. Mr. Matsushita led the Company with his corporate philosophy of contributing to the peace, happiness and prosperity of humankind through the supply of quality consumer electric and electronic goods. The Company’s business expanded rapidly with the recovery and growth of the Japanese economy after World War II, as it met rising demand for consumer electric and electronic products, starting with washing machines, black-and-white television sets (TVs) and refrigerators. During the 1950s, Matsushita expanded its operations by establishing mass production and mass sales structures to meet increasing domestic demand, while also creating subsidiaries, making acquisitions and forming alliances. During the 1960s, Matsushita expanded its overseas businesses, and its products started obtaining worldwide recognition.

 

During the global recession caused by the first oil crisis in 1973, Matsushita strengthened its structure and overseas business relations. The advent and popularity of the video cassette recorder (VCR) from the late 1970s enabled Matsushita to receive worldwide recognition as a global consumer electronics manufacturer. In the 1980s, Matsushita further worked to evolve from a consumer products manufacturer to a comprehensive electronics products manufacturer, expanding its business in the areas of information and communications technology, industrial equipment and components. Since the 1990s, Matsushita has been emphasizing technological development and the use of advanced technology in every phase of life. In particular, Matsushita has been expanding its development activities in such areas as next-generation audiovisual (AV) equipment, multimedia products, and advanced electronic components and devices, many of which incorporate digital technology.

 

Matsushita currently offers a comprehensive range of products, systems and components for consumer, business and industrial use based on sophisticated electronics and precision technology. Most of the Company’s products are marketed under the “Panasonic” brand name worldwide, along with other product- or region-specific brand names, including “National” primarily for home appliances sold in Japan and “Technics” for certain hi-fi products. Some of its subsidiaries also use their own brand names, such as “Quasar,” “Victor” and “JVC.” To sustain the future growth in the forthcoming “ubiquitous” networking age, Matsushita continues to emphasize technological development and the creation of new businesses, concentrating on several priority areas, such as digital AV networking equipment, mobile communications, data storage devices, environmental systems and related key components and devices and software. The Company is also striving to develop new service-oriented businesses, such as systems solutions and engineering services, as areas of potential growth over the mid-term period.

 

In June 1995, Matsushita sold an 80% equity interest in MCA (subsequently renamed Universal Studios, Inc.) which the Company purchased in December 1990, to The Seagram Company Ltd. (currently Vivendi Universal S.A.) for approximately U.S.$5.7 billion, leaving the Company with a minority interest.


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In April 1997, Matsushita established four internal divisional companies – responsible for AVC (audiovisual and computer products), home appliances and household equipment, air conditioners, and electric motors – by grouping a majority of its some 50 product divisions, in order to facilitate strategic planning, effective decision making and more efficient allocation of resources across a broader range than that afforded by each single product division.

 

In March 1998, the Company announced a package of new management initiatives aimed at better sharing interests with shareholders. As part of this package, management implemented, with approval at the annual shareholders’ meeting in June 1998, the repurchase of 50 million shares of the Company’s common stock, spending approximately 99 billion yen during fiscal 1999. At the same time, as an incentive to Board members and employees toward the enhancement of corporate value, the Company introduced stock option plans for Board members and select senior executives, and a stock-price-linked remuneration plan for employees of manager-level or above. The Company has been continuing share repurchases in subsequent years.

 

In October 1999, EPCOS AG, a German electronic components joint venture of the Company and Siemens AG of Germany, had its initial public offering, listing its shares on German and U.S. stock exchanges. Following EPCOS AG’s public offering, Matsushita’s 45% (held by a subsidiary) and Siemens AG’s 55% holdings in EPCOS AG were reduced to nearly 12.5%, respectively. Matsushita realized a 59 billion yen gain from the sale of its shares in EPCOS AG in fiscal 2000.

 

In April 2000, the Company made two of its majority-owned subsidiaries, Matsushita Refrigeration Company and Wakayama Precision Company, into wholly-owned subsidiaries, by means of share exchanges. As a result of the share exchanges, Matsushita issued 16,321,187 shares of its common stock to shareholders of the respective companies.

 

“VALUE CREATION 21” PLAN

 

In June 2000, Kunio Nakamura became President of Matsushita and, under his leadership, the Company implemented its new three-year business plan, called Value Creation 21, in April 2001. As the plan’s theme “Deconstruction and Creation” indicates, its objective is to transform Matsushita into a company that meets the needs of the 21st century through structural reforms and growth strategies with emphasis on enhancing growth potential, profitability and capital efficiency, thereby ensuring the Company’s continued contribution to society.

 

During fiscal 2002, the Company implemented a series of structural reforms under this Value Creation 21 plan, including the restructuring of its domestic consumer sales and distribution structure, management initiatives through the use of information technology (IT) such as supply chain management (SCM), the selective integration of businesses and manufacturing locations, manufacturing reforms such as the introduction of cell-style production, the reform of the Companywide research, development and design (R&DD) structure to concentrate development resources into strategic product or core technology areas, and employment restructuring initiatives including the regional-based employee remuneration system and early retirement programs. Expenses related to the implementation of these restructuring initiatives, combined with adverse economic conditions, caused a sharp decline in the Company’s earnings results in fiscal 2002.


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In April 2001, the Company absorbed Matsushita Electronics Corporation (MEC), its wholly-owned subsidiary, by merger to implement unified operational management in such key device areas as semiconductors and display devices. By establishing new internal divisional companies directly under the control of the parent company, namely the Semiconductor, Display Devices and Lighting companies, the development, manufacturing and sales functions that were previously disbursed between Matsushita and MEC for each of these strategic businesses have been integrated.

 

 

In April 2002, Matsushita and Toshiba Corporation (Toshiba) separated their respective liquid crystal display (LCD) panel operations and established a joint venture company, Toshiba Matsushita Display Technology Co., Ltd., for the development, manufacture and sale of LCD panels and next-generation display devices. The joint venture aims at becoming one of the world’s leading LCD panel manufactures, combining Matsushita’s fast-response LCD image processing technology, Toshiba’s technology in low-temperature polysilicon LCD panel manufacturing and both companies’ expertise in consumer products, personal computers and communications devices. Of the new company’s initial stated capital of 10 billion yen, 60% was invested by Toshiba and 40% by Matsushita.

 

 

As a drastic structural reform aimed at achieving new growth under the Value Creation 21 plan, Matsushita implemented share exchanges on October 1, 2002 with five of its majority-owned subsidiaries (Matsushita Communication Industrial Co., Ltd., Kyushu Matsushita Electric Co., Ltd., Matsushita Seiko Co., Ltd., Matsushita Kotobuki Electronics Industries, Ltd. and Matsushita Graphic Communication Systems, Inc.) and transformed them into wholly-owned subsidiaries of Matsushita. Following the completion of the share exchanges, Matsushita implemented a comprehensive Groupwide business reorganization on January 1, 2003 via company splits, business combinations and business transfers among several Group companies, including the parent company’s internal divisional companies, whereby businesses of most of the Matsushita Group were reorganized into 14 new business domains as strategic units. This major reorganization was implemented with a focus on the elimination of duplicated business lines and counterproductive competition amongst the Group companies, the unification and concentration of R&D resources, and the establishment of a totally integrated operational structure from development and manufacturing to sales in each domain for full customer satisfaction.

 

 

As an extension of this Groupwide reorganization, Matsushita transformed two of its majority-owned subsidiaries, namely Matsushita Electronic Components Co., Ltd. and Matsushita Battery Industrial Co., Ltd., into its wholly-owned subsidiaries via share exchanges, effective April 1, 2003.

 

 

Also on April 1, 2003, Matsushita launched another joint venture company with Toshiba, upon separating their respective cathode ray tube (CRT) businesses with the exception of domestic CRT manufacturing operations. The new company, Matsushita Toshiba Picture Display Co., Ltd., now positioned as the third largest TV-use CRT operation in the world, aims to maintain a competitive position in the global CRT market by integrating Matsushita and Toshiba’s advanced CRT technologies, as well as both companies’ product development and manufacturing capabilities. Of the new joint venture company’s stated capital of 10 billion yen, 64.5% was invested by Matsushita and 35.5% by Toshiba.


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Upon the aforementioned Groupwide restructurings, in April 2003, to prepare a framework that enables each business domain company to implement autonomously responsible management, Matsushita established a new global consolidated management system that focuses on cash flows. Under this new management system, each business domain company aims to maximize not only growth, but also capital efficiency and cash flows through efforts to achieve a leaner balance sheet, attaining speedy management with accelerated asset turnover on a consolidated basis.

 

Based on an agreement with Minebea Co., Ltd. signed in August 2003, certain businesses in the information equipment motor field of Matsushita were transferred to Minebea-Matsushita Motor Corporation, a joint venture of Matsushita and Minebea established on April 1, 2004. Of the new joint venture company’s stated capital of 10 billion yen, 60% was invested by Minebea and 40% by Matsushita.

 

Since fiscal 2003, Matsushita has been gradually shifting its focus from restructuring to growth, implementing the following initiatives:

 

  Development and introduction of competitive “V-products”

 

 

To bring about a swift recovery in business results, Matsushita launched 88 “V-products” in fiscal 2003 as a driving force that can capture the top share in high-volume markets and contribute to the Company’s overall performance. As a result of a Groupwide commitment to this initiative, sales of V-products reached approximately 1 trillion yen in fiscal 2003, allowing Matsushita to achieve increased market share in many product categories. In markets with shortened product lifecycles, particularly digital audiovisual (AV) equipment, the gradual launch of products into global market results in lost sales and profit opportunities. Matsushita therefore utilizes “simultaneous global product introductions” aimed at increasing both sales and profits. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita selected 90 new V-products and increased sales through global simultaneous product introductions, particularly in digital AV equipment, such as DVD recorders. As a result, overall sales of V-products reached approximately 1.24 trillion yen on a global basis in fiscal 2004.

 

  Expansion of overseas business

 

 

The Company is taking various initiatives to strengthen overseas operations as an engine for overall corporate growth. For the mid-term, Matsushita is aiming at achieving over 60% of total operating profit from its overseas operations. Specifically, the Company plans to accelerate operational expansion in China, aiming for a 1 trillion yen business size on a Groupwide basis in fiscal 2006.

 

  Enhancement of brand value

 

 

In April 2003, Matsushita announced that it would position the “Panasonic” brand as a globally unified brand for overseas markets under the slogan of “Panasonic ideas for life.” This new brand strategy, conveys to customers all over the world a new image for the Company and its products, while further enhancing brand value.


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  R&D strategy

 

 

In R&D, to increase efficiency, the Company realigned technological management categorization and systems. In corporate R&D functions, to encourage engineers to concentrate on prioritized R&D themes and leading-edge technologies, Matsushita introduced a new management system with which it can administrate themes at each step in the research process. In business domain companies’ R&D functions, Matsushita significantly reduced lead time for product development by introducing an innovative R&D process management developed from the standpoint of return on investment.

 

COLLABORATION WITH MEW

 

In December 2003, Matsushita reached a basic agreement regarding a comprehensive business collaboration with an affiliate, Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd. (MEW), after which Matsushita initiated a tender offer for additional shares of MEW. As a result of the tender offer in which the Company purchased an additional 140,550 thousand shares of common stock of MEW at the total cost of 147 billion yen, MEW, PanaHome Corporation and their respective group companies became consolidated subsidiaries of the Company in April 2004. Through collaboration, Matsushita and MEW aim for global excellence by maximizing synergy effects between the two companies to create new growth and increase productivity. The two companies have also agreed to integrate their brand strategies, whereby, from October 2004, the “NAIS” and “National” brands currently used by MEW will be unified under the “National” brand for products sold in Japan, and the “Panasonic” brand for those sold in overseas markets. Regarding business operations initiatives, the two companies will strive to achieve further growth in such areas as home appliances, household equipment and construction materials, electric equipment, lighting, home and building networks, environment-related systems and healthcare and medical equipment, thereby solidifying the Matsushita Group’s position as a global leader in these fields.

 

“LEAP AHEAD 21” PLAN

 

Matsushita’s business vision focuses on “realizing a ubiquitous networking society” and “contributing to coexistence with the global environment” through leading-edge technologies. Based on this vision, Matsushita will make efforts to be a company which creates more value for customers all over the world by 2010. As the midpoint toward achieving this goal, Matsushita established its new mid-term management plan “Leap Ahead 21,” for the three-year term from fiscal 2005 through 2007, and commenced initiatives for sustainable growth. The Leap Ahead 21 will mainly implement following two initiatives.

 

Accelerating Growth Business

 

Matsushita is positioning selected V-products as the main vehicle of future growth. During fiscal 2005, the initial year of the Leap Ahead 21, Matsushita plans to introduce 71 new V-products based in three core concepts: unique and advanced “black-box technologies” that cannot be easily imitated by competitors; “universal design” to make products easier to use for everyone; and, “environmental consideration,” such as saving energy and resources. The Company will develop V-products into “strong business pillars” that result in global market expansion and earning maximum profits at an early stage in product lifecycles.

 

In addition, the Company’s comprehensive business collaboration with MEW will commence in fiscal 2005, through which the Company aims to establish an optimum operating structure from the customer’s point of view and maximize value for the new Matsushita Group.


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Reinforcing Management Structures

 

With the objective of further enhancing profitability, Matsushita will speed up structural reforms in several business domain companies. Also, the Company will promote activities to reduce inventories and cut materials costs, as well as eliminate all unnecessary costs in all areas of business, thereby creating a leaner management structure.

 

CAPITAL INVESTMENT

 

Total capital investment (excluding intangibles) amounted to 320 billion yen, 251 billion yen, and 271 billion yen for fiscal 2002, 2003, and 2004, respectively. In these years, Matsushita curbed capital investment in a number of business areas, in line with an increased management emphasis on cash flows and capital efficiency, as seen in an increased adoption of cell-style production, which allowed the use of smaller scale facilities. Matsushita did, however, selectively invest in facilities for those product areas that are expected to drive future growth, including such key areas as semiconductors, plasma display panels (PDPs) and other strategic products.

 

For the current fiscal year ending March 31, 2005 (fiscal 2005), Matsushita expects its capital investment to increase to approximately 340 billion yen. This investment will be funded primarily through internal sources.

 

 

B. Business Overview

 

SALES BY PRODUCT CATEGORY

 

Matsushita is engaged in the production and sales of electronic and electric products in a broad array of business areas. The following table sets forth the Company’s sales breakdown by product category for the last three fiscal years:

 

     Yen (billions) (%)

 
     Fiscal year ended March 31,

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

AVC Networks:

                                 

Video and audio equipment

   1,418    19 %   1,398    19 %   1,296    18 %

Information and communications equipment

   2,206    29     2,114    29     2,100    30  
    
  

 
  

 
  

Subtotal

   3,624    48     3,512    48     3,396    48  

Home Appliances

   1,189    16     1,184    16     1,142    16  

Components and Devices

   1,142    15     1,194    16     1,090    15  

JVC

   803    11     828    11     813    12  

Other

   722    10     684    9     633    9  
    
  

 
  

 
  

Total

   7,480    100 %   7,402    100 %   7,074    100 %
    
  

 
  

 
  


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Note:

   As described in the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements, effective fiscal 2004, the Company reclassified product categories for sales breakdown reporting purposes, whereby sales are now divided into five new categories: AVC Networks, Home Appliances, Components and Devices, JVC and Other. Prior year figures have been restated to reflect this change.

 

AVC Networks

 

Matsushita’s principal products in the AVC Networks category include video and audio equipment and information and communications equipment. Products in this category have been undergoing rapid technological changes as a result of digitization and networking, along with rapidly evolving broadband communications, which in turn have provided new business opportunities. As a leading manufacturer in many product lines in the AVC Networks category, Matsushita has been striving to achieve new growth by offering competitive digital and networkable products based on “black-box” technologies through simultaneous global marketing, aiming at contributing to the creation of a “ubiquitous networking society.”

 

Video and Audio Equipment

 

Principal products in this sector include TVs, VCRs, camcorders, digital still cameras (DSCs), DVD players and recorders, and personal and home audio equipment. Matsushita maintains a leading share in the domestic and overseas markets for a number of major products in this field. During the three-year period ended March 31, 2004, Matsushita expanded sales in this category by taking a lead in the introduction of attractive digital and networkable products, despite the negative effects of slow consumer spending, especially in Japan, and intensified global price competition. A series of competitive V-products that the Company has introduced since fiscal 2003 has been a major factor in this growth. Matsushita’s current focus is to strengthen its “3D” value chain—consisting of secure digital memory cards (SD Memory Cards) and compatible products, DVDs and digital TVs—to create new demand in the digital networking era.

 

In TVs, Matsushita produces a broad range of models to meet all segments of demand in domestic and international markets, ranging from cathode ray tube (CRT) models to flat-panel TVs, such as plasma display panel (PDP) and liquid crystal display (LCD) TVs. The Company’s CRT TVs include both analog and digital models, while all of its flat-panel TVs are digital. Matsushita introduced three new 9.9cm-thick PDP TVs in 37-, 42- and 50-inch models in fiscal 2003, which were the world’s first to integrate digital tuners for broadcast satellite (BS), communications satellite and terrestrial broadcasting. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita introduced new high-definition PDP TVs in 37-, 42- and 50-inch models with built-in slots for compact SD Memory Cards and the picture enhancement accelerator with kinetic system (PEAKS) for outstanding picture quality. Meanwhile, Matsushita has also reinforced its lineup of LCD TVs. Building on its LCD TV range of 14- to 22-inch models, Matsushita introduced a 32-inch model in fiscal 2003 and new 14-, 17- and 20-inch models with PEAKS for outstanding picture quality in fiscal 2004. To promote the advantage of digital TVs in the networking era, Matsushita has recently begun offering various digital TV models with Internet connection capability called T-Navi in the Japanese market. As flat-panel TVs have entered a rapid growth phase in Japan and overseas, the Company has been expanding its PDP manufacturing facilities, aiming at maintaining its top share of the worldwide PDP TV market. (See related description of PDP facility expansion under “Components and Devices” below.)


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In the VCR and video camera area, Matsushita has been expanding its range of digital camcorders and DSC that incorporate SD Memory Card slots for data storage and enhanced networking convenience. Of these, new models of DSC that benefit from the world-renowned optical technology of Leica Camera AG achieved notable market success in fiscal 2003. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita introduced new models of DSC that leverage unique and advanced technologies, such as aspherical lenses and optical image stabilizers (OIS). A new compact, easy-to-use SD Multi AV Recorder capable of recording and playback of digital video, still images, audio and other content on an SD Memory Card was also introduced during fiscal 2003. The Company added the world’s slimmest model to this product line in fiscal 2004.

 

As for DVDs, Matsushita offers a wide range of DVD players and DVD recorders. Since its introduction of the first DVD recorder in 2000, the Company has been the market forerunner in this product line. The Company continued its lead by launching a series of competitive models with built-in hard disk drives (HDDs) for extended recording time and SD Memory Card slots. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita began simultaneous global introductions for its latest DVD recorders, and reinforced product range with VCR combination models with dual tuners for simultaneous recording of two channels.

 

In the area of audio equipment, Matsushita produces a variety of products, including compact disc (CD) players, CD radio cassette recorders and Mini Disc players, as well as radio receivers, tape recorders, portable headphone players, stereo hi-fi equipment and electronic musical instruments. Matsushita expanded its range of new audio equipment in recent years with the launch of DVD-Audio players and a series of products using the SD Memory Card, such as an ultra-compact “wearable” headphone player. Matsushita has been greatly expanding its range of SD Memory Card compatible products, covering not only audio and video equipment, but also information and communications equipment and home appliances, which has further enhanced the Company’s leadership of the SD format in the industry.

 

Information and Communications Equipment

 

Information equipment includes products such as personal computers (PCs), PC displays, CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, DVD-RAM and other optical disk drives, HDDs, copying machines and printers. Communications equipment includes products such as facsimile equipment, cordless telephones, cellular phones, other mobile communications equipment and digital private branch exchanges. Products in this sector also include other systems equipment, such as car audio and navigation equipment, cable TV systems, broadcast- and business-use AV equipment and systems, large-screen visual equipment and communications network-related equipment. Of these, Matsushita is a worldwide leader in such business lines as optical disk drives, facsimile equipment, broadcast-use digital VCR equipment and airline in-flight AV systems. The Company also maintains a leading position in the Japanese cellular phone industry.

 

With respect to PCs, Matsushita continued to upgrade its notebook models over the last several years, centered on slim, lightweight notebook PCs, and ruggedized notebook PCs built to resist shock. In fiscal 2002, Matsushita introduced the world’s lightest (960 grams) B5-sized notebook PC in Japan, followed by even smaller and lighter models during fiscal 2003. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita introduced the world’s lightest (1,299 grams) B5-sized notebook PC with a 12.1-inch LCD screen and a built-in DVD-ROM and CD-R/RW combination drive.


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In the area of PC peripherals, Matsushita has been focusing on upgrading its disk drive lineups. In optical disk drives, the Company introduced DVD multi drives compatible with DVD-RAM, DVD-R and DVD-RW formats in fiscal 2002. To meet demand related to slim notebook PCs, Matsushita developed the industry’s slimmest and lightest DVD multi drives in fiscal 2004. As for HDDs, the Company has become more selective in its product lineup during the past few years, focusing on upgraded models using hydro dynamic bearing spindle motors, and 1.8-inch small-form-factor HDDs for use in notebook PCs and mobile AV equipment, while substantially reducing production of conventional 3.5-inch HDDs.

 

In the area of mobile communications equipment, in recent years, Matsushita has developed and introduced a number of new cellular phones, including third generation (3G) format products with a focus on advanced functions, stylish designs and ease-of-use. Sales of cellular phones experienced a setback in fiscal 2002 due to both a sharp decline in demand, especially in Japan and Europe, and glitches that were found in certain models. Early in fiscal 2003, the Company launched new thin cellular phones for NTT DoCoMo, Inc. that are mobile Internet-compatible and have high picture quality and, in the second half of that fiscal year, in response to the rapid development in demand, the Company introduced new models with built-in cameras. These new models were well received and helped to boost the Company’s reputation in the Japanese cellular phone market. Meanwhile, the Company has been expanding its business in overseas markets, especially in Europe and China, centered on GSM standard cellular models including, most recently, clamshell design camera-equipped handsets and ultra-compact, stylish models. Regarding 3G cellular phones, corresponding to NTT DoCoMo’s commencement of wideband code division multiple access (W-CDMA) services in Japan during fiscal 2002, Matsushita began shipments of W-CDMA base stations and terminals. The Company was the first in the world to develop and supply W-CDMA cellular phones that provide a TV-phone function through transmission of moving images and large volumes of data. In fiscal 2003, a new W-CDMA cellular phone was launched that boasts a rotating LCD screen for camcorder-style recording of video and still images, followed by the introduction in fiscal 2004 of a new model with a built-in auto-focus 1.28 megapixel CCD camera and interchangeable decorative jackets. The Company intends to solidify its competitive position as a leader in the 3G market.

 

In the area of fixed-line communications, Matsushita over the years has developed businesses in such products as facsimile equipment, cordless telephones, copiers and printers, primarily as stand-alone products. Beginning with the introduction of a multifunction model that provides facsimile, copier, printer, scanner and telephone functions in a single unit, however, the Company has been placing an increased focus on integration of communications and digital imaging technologies. This move was further accelerated by the merger in early 2003 of two major subsidiaries operating in this area. Matsushita also has been developing Internet-protocol (IP) products, such as IPv6 technology-based telephones and facsimile machines, using the synergies of the merger and the advantage of possessing both imaging and communications technologies.


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In the area of car AV equipment, Matsushita supplies advanced car navigation systems for the domestic market, while further promoting global expansion in car audio equipment. Through joint efforts with automakers, Matsushita in fiscal 2002 launched a new car navigation model that can receive various mobile information services, followed by another model with a built-in HDD capable of processing a large volume of data in an instant. In fiscal 2003, the Company began supplying an upgraded model as an in-car multimedia terminal to a leading automobile company in Japan. Demand has been steadily growing for DVD-equipped car multimedia systems. In response, in fiscal 2004, the Company introduced a new car navigation system series in Japan that incorporates DVD and other AV entertainment features. Overseas, the Company launched new car audio equipment in the North American market, including a rear-seat entertainment system that features a flat-panel, large-screen LCD display with a built-in DVD player, and a digital surround sound car audio system compatible with high-quality DVD audio. Meanwhile, to address the expansion of electronic toll collection (ETC) services in Japan, the Company has been increasing sales of in-car terminals, as well as related infrastructure equipment.

 

In the area of broadcast-use AV equipment and systems, the DVCPRO series of digital video systems has always been the Company’s flagship product. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita announced an upgraded model, the DVCPRO P2, which is designed to use SD Memory Cards as its recording media. Meanwhile, with the start of terrestrial digital broadcasting in Japan in December 2003, Matsushita supplied digital broadcasting systems, including a compact, light DVCPRO series, to major TV broadcasting stations in Japan. Matsushita’s leading position in the global in-flight AV systems market has been strengthened by continued deliveries of popular AV systems with LCD monitors and advanced personal multimedia systems that allow passengers to enjoy in-flight entertainment and shopping from their seats.

 

Home Appliances

 

 

Matsushita’s principal products in this category include home appliances, such as refrigerators, room air conditioners, washing machines, clothes dryers, vacuum cleaners, electric irons, microwave ovens, cooking appliances, dishwasher/dryers; and household equipment, mainly comprising kitchen fixture systems, electric, gas and kerosene hot water supply equipment, and bath and sanitary equipment. This category also includes healthcare systems, lighting, and environmental systems.

 

Building upon its position as the leading manufacturer in the Japanese home appliance industry, Matsushita strives to further develop value-added products that address changing and diversifying customer lifestyles, the trend toward an aging population and rapidly growing interest in health and the environment.


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In the area of electric home appliances and household equipment, Matsushita in fiscal 2002 was one of the first manufacturers to develop a refrigerator using hydrocarbon refrigerant, which eliminates the use of ozone layer depletive refrigerants. Furthermore, Matsushita introduced an eco-friendly and energy-efficient water heating system that employs a natural refrigerant heat pump and boasts an ozone-depleting coefficient of zero in April 2002. During fiscal 2003, Matsushita introduced a fully automatic clothes washer/dryer, featuring a unique “foam washing” system; a combination steamer/microwave oven; a new series of hydrofluorocarbon (HFC)-free, large inner-capacity refrigerators; and a unique air conditioner that offers the same oxygen concentration indoors as that found in the natural environment. In fiscal 2004, the Company successfully increased its domestic market share in major appliances, as it introduced a user-friendly washer/dryer with a 30-degree tilted drum featuring lower water consumption, an air conditioner incorporating a ventilating function in addition to the above-mentioned unique oxygen charging technology, 200V flameless induction-heating (IH) cooking equipment that is compatible with cooking ware made of any metal, and a new water heating system that uses CO2 as a natural refrigerant and boasts the industry’s highest energy efficiency. Several of these new high-value added products, such as HFC-free refrigerators and air conditioners featuring the oxygen charging technology were also introduced into the Asian market, including China.

 

Matsushita’s efforts have also been extended to the development of home appliance business using digital networking technologies that will provide customers with solutions for safe, convenient and comfortable living. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita launched a new networked home appliance system that enables customers to control home appliances such as air conditioners, refrigerators, washing machines and microwave ovens through wireless control functions, including the ability to report irregularities or emergencies detected through various sensors.

 

In the healthcare systems business, in fiscal 2002 Matsushita introduced a Web-based tele-healthcare system that allows patients to measure their vital signs and doctors to remotely access the patient’s information. The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan officially recognized the system to be introduced for medical use. In fiscal 2004, a new system that measures the glucose level quickly and accurately with just a small amount of blood contributed to the Company’s sales increase.

 

In the lighting business, in fiscal 2003 Matsushita developed an electrodeless ballasted compact fluorescent lamp featuring low power consumption and extended life, and in 2004 the Company began selling a spiral-shaped ballasted compact florescent lamp, which, although the same size as an incandescent lamp, offers greater energy efficiency.

 

In the environment-related systems business, Matsushita began construction of ventilation facilities for the Hai Van Tunnel in Vietnam in fiscal 2003. In Japan, ventilation systems and equipment that comply with the revised construction standards law to combat “sick house” syndrome contributed to Matsushita’s sales increase in this product category in fiscal 2004. Meanwhile, the Company supplied a wind power generation system to the 2004 Athens Olympics. The Company also introduced the world’s first air purifier with a filter to neutralize allergens in fiscal 2004.

 

Components and Devices

 

 

Major products included in this category are semiconductors, general components, display devices, batteries and electric motors, some of which are incorporated into Matsushita’s finished products and some of which are for sale to other manufacturers.


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Matsushita is strengthening businesses in the components and devices category by concentrating efforts on “black-box,” or proprietary, technologies, particularly in the area of semiconductors such as system LSIs, the key to Matsushita’s competitive edge in digital AV and information/communications equipment. The Company is enhancing cooperation between components and devices and finished product divisions from the product development stage to create value chains around them. Matsushita also strives to expand external sales of components and devices to accelerate sales growth and strengthen the earnings base.

 

Matsushita’s semiconductor business is primarily made up of integrated circuits (ICs), such as metal oxide semiconductor large-scale integration (LSI) circuits and bipolar ICs, discrete devices and image sensor including charge coupled devices (CCDs). Matsushita has been focusing on five main growth businesses, comprising four system LSI fields, namely those for optical disk-related products, digital TVs, mobile communications, and networks and SD Memory Cards, and image sensors. These operations support innovative and competitive products at the Company’s finished product divisions and, as a value chain, the success of these finished products support sales of system LSIs for external customers. In particular, Matsushita has been strengthening development of multifunctional system LSI circuits, which form the basis of digital network-related equipment. Successful results in recent years include system LSI chip sets for DVD players and recorders, MPEG-2 encoder chips and 32-bit microcontrollers with embedded dynamic RAM. In fiscal 2003, Matsushita developed a power-efficient multi-codec system LSI, enabling extended continuous operating time for cellular phones that provide video phone and other video content capabilities, and a new system LSI for digital high-definition television (HDTV) broadcast receivers that accomplishes all back-end processing functions on a single chip. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita began mass production of 0.18-micron FeRAM (ferroelectric random-access memory)-embedded system-on-a chip (SoC), a system LSI for mobile network applications. Meanwhile, Matsushita has also been striving to achieve higher levels of manufacturing process technologies. In April 2002, the Company commenced production of highly integrated 0.13-micron system LSIs primarily for digital AV equipment. Furthermore, Matsushita began construction of a new semiconductor production facility in Japan, installing the cutting-edge 90-nanometer production process for 300mm wafers in May 2004. In the area of image sensors, in October 2003, Matsushita integrated its CCD and camera module businesses, thereby achieving a more effective organizational structure. In February 2004, the Company developed the industry’s smallest image sensor, featuring high picture quality and low power consumption for applications such as camera-equipped cellular phones and AV equipment.

 

Matsushita manufactures a variety of general components, including capacitors, modules, printed circuit boards, power supply and inductive products, circuit components, electromechanical components and speakers for AV equipment, automotive electronics and information/ communications. In fiscal 2002, Matsushita augmented its range of specialty polymer aluminum electrolytic capacitors, while also developing cutting-edge ultracompact, high-capacitance products in the field of multi-layer ceramic chip capacitors and film capacitors. Furthermore, in fiscal 2003, Matsushita developed three-dimensional integrated circuit modules that help downsize and enhance functionalities of mobile electronic devices and networked appliances. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita expanded sales of high-fidelity speakers for flat-panel TVs, weight sensors for protective airbags and multilayer printed circuit boards. In an effort to achieve growth and enhanced profitability in the general components business, the Company has continued to implement selection and concentration of management resources, especially in capacitor operations.


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In the area of display devices, Matsushita manufactures PDPs and CRTs, while production of LCDs has been shifted to a joint venture company created with Toshiba Corporation (Toshiba). Regarding PDPs, Matsushita has boosted its product lineup with the marketing of competitively-priced 37-, 42- and 50-inch units. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita introduced new 37-, 42- and 50-inch high definition PDPs for outstanding picture quality. Matsushita has been strengthening its PDP manufacturing structure through a number of initiatives, including the commencement of panel production at its PDP assembly plant in China in December 2002 and at its new manufacturing facility in Japan in April 2004. Regarding LCD devices, Matsushita and Toshiba combined their respective LCD operations and jointly established Toshiba Matsushita Display Technology Co., Ltd. in April 2002. The joint venture company has added new cutting-edge products, including low-temperature polysilicon LCD panels, to the existing product lineups of LCDs for PCs, cellular phones and TVs. Regarding CRTs, in order to strengthen competitiveness, Matsushita and Toshiba integrated their global CRT operations and launched a new company, Matsushita Toshiba Picture Display Co., Ltd., in April 2003. The new CRT joint venture seeks synergies from the combination of Matsushita and Toshiba’s advanced TV-use CRT product development capabilities and manufacturing technologies. (For additional information on the LCD and CRT joint ventures, see Section A of this Item 4.)

 

Matsushita is an industry leader in primary batteries, especially dry batteries, and is also expanding its line of rechargeable batteries. Matsushita has increased production of compact, high-performance batteries, such as long-life alkaline batteries and lithium-ion rechargeable batteries, as these products are increasingly used in compact electronic equipment such as DSCs, cellular phones and notebook PCs. In addition, the Company introduced such new long-life compact batteries as nickel manganese batteries in fiscal 2003, and another new high-performance dry battery, that boasts approximately 1.5 times the life and performance of ordinary alkaline batteries in fiscal 2004, for a wide variety of applications, including DSC and portable audio players. To strengthen its competitive position in compact rechargeable batteries, the Company further expanded its lithium-ion battery plant in Osaka in fiscal 2003, and started manufacturing these batteries in China from April 2004 to meet increasing demand from cellular phone manufacturers.

 

Matsushita’s line of electric motors includes those for information equipment, consumer appliances and factory automation (FA) equipment. In the area of information equipment motors, Matsushita has been an industry leader in vibration motors for cellular phones and polygon mirror scanner motors for laser beam printers. Matsushita is also a major manufacturer of brushless motors for appliances and servo motors for FA equipment. Since fiscal 2003, the Company has implemented restructuring in this business area for concentration of resources into growth areas, such as brushless motors and FA servo motors. In October 2003, Matsushita transferred the HDD-use fluid dynamic bearing motor business to Matsushita Kotobuki Electronics Industries, Ltd., and closed two manufacturing locations in Japan in December of that year. Meanwhile, Matsushita accelerated expansion of operations in China for appliance and FA motors, and also shifted its information equipment motor business excluding brushless motors to a new company jointly established with Minebea Co., Ltd.

 

JVC

 

The JVC category represents businesses of Victor Company of Japan, Ltd. and its group companies (JVC). Major products in this category include consumer electronic equipment (such as VCRs, camcorders, TVs, stereo hi-fi equipment, DVD products and other AV products), professional electronic equipment and systems, components, and prerecorded audio and video software and recordable media. These products are sold under “Victor” or “JVC” brand names primarily through JVC’s own sales and distribution networks in Japan and overseas.


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Over the last three fiscal years, JVC has placed priority on creating original, high quality products, “Only One” products that incorporate JVC’s market-leading audio and visual technology. These efforts helped JVC to achieve solid sales results in its consumer electronics business in these years.

 

In the consumer electronics field, JVC’s technological achievements in recent years have included high-definition displays incorporating Digital Image Scaling Technology (D.I.S.T.) and digital high-density storage systems such as D-VHS and DVD recorders/players. Building upon such technological strength, JVC has further worked on enhancing the network connectivity of its mainstay AV products. In fiscal 2002, part of these efforts resulted in market success in such products as a new VHS/DVD- combination deck, DVD players, car AV systems and digital video cameras. In fiscal 2003, continued sales success was achieved in new growth products, such as high definition TVs and PDP TVs. During fiscal 2004, digital technology became more widespread in the consumer electronics industry, and JVC expanded its range of PDP TVs and DVD recorders, and also introduced LCD TVs. During these years, as part of a global manufacturing base realigning program, JVC positioned its Yokohama Plant as the “core mother base” of all worldwide consumer electronics production. JVC also implemented other restructuring initiatives to ready itself for the next phase of growth.

 

In the professional electronics field, JVC has focused on two categories, the security and presentation systems. As a result, over the last three fiscal years, sales of security systems, that include JVC’s high performance surveillance cameras, recorded consistent growth. During these years, businesses of other professional electronics systems experienced setbacks, with an exception of digital broadcasting equipment, which met rising demand on expansion of digital broadcasting services in Japan.

 

JVC’s software and media businesses have been operated mainly in Japan. During the last three fiscal years, sales in Japanese music software business fell due to the industry-wide slump. However, JVC released hit records continuously, including CDs from such artists as Keisuke Kuwata and Dragon Ash in fiscal 2002, CDs and DVDs of Keisuke Kuwata and SMAP in fiscal 2003, and albums of the Southern All Stars and SMAP in fiscal 2004. Meanwhile, JVC has been expanding its range of recordable media business, including DVD-RW and Mini DV tapes.

 

In its new mid-term plan (Leap Ahead 21 plan), JVC positions the consumer electronics business to play a central role in accelerating the company’s growth. Specifically, JVC will focus on display and optical disk products.

 

Other

 

Matsushita’s other category includes factory automation (FA) equipment, industrial robots, welding machines, power distribution equipment and other industrial equipment. Matsushita aims to enhance service to its customers through innovative manufacturing processes centered on circuit manufacturing technology. Specifically, responding to trends in more compact digital products, the Company provides optimum solutions in electronic component mounting, fine devices, manufacturing processes, welding machines and robots.


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In the area of FA equipment, Matsushita is one of the world’s leaders in placement machines including fine device bonding systems and fine process equipment, and also produces industrial robots. Within the mainstay placement machine, while developing and launching machines with faster processing-speeds and higher functionality, the Company has been building new core businesses by augmenting its lineups of high-growth device bonding systems in recent years. As part of this strategy, Matsushita launched modular placement machines suitable for flexible production styles, such as cell-style production in fiscal 2002, followed by the introduction of modular placement machines that were one of the highest levels of productivity in the industry in fiscal 2003. Furthermore, in fiscal 2004, the Company enhanced growth by strengthening the electronic-parts mounting system business and fine device bonding system business supported by active FA equipment demand from Euro-American Electronics Manufacturing Services (EMS) in China, Taiwan and Korea, and Taiwanese manufacturers’ Original Design Manufacturing (ODM) as a result of increasing demands of digital AV products, such as cellular phones and PCs.

 

In the area of welding machines, Matsushita introduced a fully digital carbon dioxide/metal active gas automatic welding machine that allows for superior welds over a variety of materials in fiscal 2002, followed by the introduction of a fully digital welding robot in fiscal 2003. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita expanded deliveries of fully digital automatic welding machines and robots, to automobile-related industries.

 

MARKETING CHANNELS

 

The table below shows a breakdown of Matsushita’s net sales by geographical area for the periods indicated:

 

     Yen (billions) (%)

 
     Fiscal year ended March 31,

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Japan

   3,478    46 %   3,454    47 %   3,314    47 %

North and South America

   1,327    18     1,421    19     1,495    21  

Europe

   1,080    15     1,000    13     839    12  

Asia and Others

   1,595    21     1,527    21     1,426    20  
    
  

 
  

 
  

Total

   7,480    100 %   7,402    100 %   7,074    100 %
    
  

 
  

 
  

 

Sales and Distribution in Japan

 

In Japan, Matsushita’s products are sold through several sales channels, each established according to the type of products or customers: Sales of consumer and household products are handled or coordinated by relevant corporate sales divisions, such as the Corporate Marketing Division for Panasonic Brand and the Corporate Marketing Division for National Brand, while sales of general electronic components and certain other devices to manufacturers are handled by the Corporate Industrial Marketing & Sales Division, in each case to stay close to respective customers and meet their specific and ever-diversifying needs. For other products, there are also organizations under the direct control of business domain companies that conduct sales and marketing of their own products, mostly to non-consumer customers, such as industrial and business corporations, public institutions, construction companies and governments through their sales offices and subsidiaries or through outside agencies.


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Of the above, the Corporate Marketing Division for Panasonic Brand and the Corporate Marketing Division for National Brand were established in April 2001 as part of Matsushita’s domestic consumer sales and distribution structure reorganizations, whereby the former corporate consumer products sales divisions, sales functions within individual product divisions and the Advertising Division were integrated into the two new corporate marketing divisions to provide greater customer satisfaction by shortening the distance between factories and consumers.

 

Also, as part of such reorganizations, in October 2001, Matsushita consolidated its 22 regional consumer sales companies throughout Japan, which handle distribution through local consumer electronics and appliance retailers, into a single company. Meanwhile, Matsushita’s sales structure for volume retailers through another single sales subsidiary is being strengthened by expanding supply chain management (SCM). In addition, also in October 2001, Matsushita’s credit sales subsidiary and leasing subsidiary were merged into one company, Matsushita Leasing & Credit Co., Ltd. By implementing these reforms and revitalizing its domestic consumer sales and distribution operations, Matsushita aimed at creation of an efficient structure that ensures speedy responses to customer needs and realizes a significant reduction in distribution costs and an increased market share.

 

Overseas Operations

 

Worldwide, Matsushita has 372 consolidated companies as well as 59 companies which are reflected by the equity method. International marketing and sales of Matsushita’s products are handled mainly through its sales subsidiaries and affiliates located in respective countries or regions in coordination with business domain companies and regional headquarter companies. In some countries, however, marketing and sales are handled through independent agents or distributors, depending on regional characteristics. Additionally, certain products are also sold on an OEM basis and marketed under the brand names of third parties.

 

Overseas sales represented approximately 54% of the Company’s total consolidated sales in fiscal 2004.

 

In order to promote global business development, Matsushita has been expanding its overseas manufacturing operations. The Company’s overseas manufacturing is conducted by overseas manufacturing subsidiaries and affiliates under the control of business domain companies in coordination with regional headquarter companies. In April 2003, a new business performance evaluation system was introduced, whereby the performance of each business domain company is now evaluated based on Capital Cost Management (CCM), which measures capital efficiency, and cash flows, on a global consolidated basis, including overseas companies under its control. This provides incentive to each business domain company to further establish globally optimized operational structures.

 

In recent years, the Company established a globally optimized manufacturing structure, taking into consideration cost and proximity to market as well as social, political and environmental factors. Currently, we view Asia, China and Eastern Europe as critical to this structure. Specifically, Matsushita has focused on China as a large potential market and a production site to supply global as well as Chinese markets. As such, the Company has been enhancing production capacity at its Chinese facilities for such borderless products as DVD players, microwave ovens, compressors and components, as well as such new growth products as PDPs.


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Matsushita also places an emphasis on promoting localization of research and development of products and technologies to enhance competitiveness of overseas manufacturing sites. Such endeavors included establishment of a second R&D base in China in fiscal 2003 to speed up local-based product development and to build an optimum global R&D network. In January 2004, Matsushita established a software development site in China to minimize escalating software development costs in areas such as digital consumer electronics. In Asia, the Company established “Panasonic R&D Center Malaysia” in October 2003 as a digital networking multi-media software development base.

 

Customers

 

The largest markets for Matsushita have traditionally been consumer products. However, since the 1980s, the proportion of sales to non-consumer customers, such as industrial and business corporations, governments and other institutions, including large customers such as electric and electronic equipment manufacturers, automotive manufacturers and various other machinery makers, has been rising as Matsushita places increasing emphasis on industrial and commercial products and systems and electronic components. Matsushita’s business is not materially dependent on any single customer.

 

SEASONALITY OF BUSINESS

 

The Company’s business has no significant seasonality in terms of sales or profits. However, for the consumer electronics business, the fiscal third quarter (October to December) is normally a peak because it falls in the year-end shopping season in Japan and many overseas markets. Additionally, seasonal appliances, such as air conditioners and refrigerators, have different business cycles, which sales peak in summer. These do not have a material effect upon the Company’s overall operations.

 

RAW MATERIALS AND SOURCE OF SUPPLY

 

Matsushita purchases a wide variety of parts and materials from various suppliers in Japan and abroad. The Company applies a multi-sourcing policy —not depending upon any one particular source of supply for any essential item. The Company has also been endeavoring to promote a policy of global optimum purchasing by concentrating order placements to qualified suppliers from all over the world and buying the most competitive parts and materials.

 

In an attempt to improve operational efficiency and to reduce parts and materials costs, Matsushita has been increasing centralized purchasing at its headquarters for materials commonly used in many product divisions throughout Matsushita, such as steels, plastics, semiconductors, electronic components, while at the same time accelerating the initiatives to standardize parts and materials. Such efforts are coordinated by the Corporate Centralized Purchasing Center established in April 2003. At the business domain companies’ level, an increasing focus has been also paid to the centralized purchasing for the parts and materials commonly used in factories within each business domain company.

 

For fiscal 2005, to minimize adverse effects of global price increases of raw materials, Matsushita will further strengthen materials cost reduction initiatives including a reduction in the number of parts through the standardization of design, use of “Value Engineering” techniques, and additional cost reduction activities covering indirect auxiliary materials.


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PATENT LICENSE AGREEMENTS

 

Matsushita holds numerous Japanese and foreign patents and utility model registrations for its products, and shares technologies with a number of Japanese and foreign manufacturers. Its technical assistance, or licensing, to other manufacturers has been increasing year by year. For example, Matsushita’s patents related to MPEG2 technology, which is widely used in digital TVs, are licensed to other companies through MPEG LA LLC. Patents which are essential to DVD technology are licensed as a part of the joint licensing program operated by seven Japanese and U.S. companies. Furthermore, the Company’s patents relating to CD technology are licensed to many manufacturers.

 

Matsushita is a licensee under various license agreements which cover a wide range of products, including AV products, computers, communications equipment, semiconductors and other components. Matsushita has non-exclusive patent license agreements, with among others, Thomson Licensing Inc. and Thomson Licensing S.A. covering a broad range of its products, including TVs, VCRs, CD players and CD-ROM drives. Matsushita has non-exclusive patent cross-license agreements, with among others, Texas Instruments Incorporated and International Business Machines Corporation, both covering semiconductors, information equipment and certain other related products. Matsushita has non-exclusive patent cross-license agreements with Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. covering semiconductor devices, various lamps, cathode-ray and electron tubes and certain other products.

 

Most of Matsushita’s license and technical assistance agreements are for three- to ten-year periods, unless the agreements cover specific patents to be licensed therein, in which case they are normally for the life of the patent.

 

The Company considers all of its technical exchange and license agreements beneficial to its operations.

 

COMPETITION

 

The markets in which the Company sells its products are highly competitive. Matsushita’s principal competitors, across the full range of its products, consist of several large Japanese and overseas manufacturers and a number of smaller and more specialized companies. Advancements toward a borderless economy have also applied pressure to Japanese manufacturers, including Matsushita, in terms of global price competition, especially from Chinese and Korean manufacturers. To counter this, the Company is devising various measures to enhance its competitiveness, with a focus on the development of differentiated products and cost reduction and efficiency improvements. Such measures include the development of products with Matsushita’s “black-box” or proprietary technologies, innovation of manufacturing processes through the use of information technology, increasing overseas production for optimum manufacturing allocation from a global perspective, and shortening production and distribution lead time through the expansion of SCM in cooperation with several overseas and domestic mass-scale retailers and the introduction of cell-style production, as well as developing joint ventures and other cooperative agreements with domestic and overseas partners.

 

Also, with the development of digital and networking technologies, competition in terms of the so-called “de facto” standard has become crucial. In response, Matsushita has been strengthening its efforts toward alliances with leaders not only in the electronics industry but also the software, devices, broadcasting, communications services and other diverse industries.


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GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS

 

Like other electronics manufacturers, Matsushita is subject to government regulations related to the environment.

 

Matsushita has established an efficient system to collect and recycle end-of-life home appliance, comprising air conditioners, TVs, refrigerators, washing machines and PCs in compliance with the Japanese Law for Recycling of Specified Kinds of Consumer Electric Goods (the Recycling Law) effective April 1, 2001. The Company also established the Matsushita Eco Technology Center Co., Ltd. not only for dismantling used products and recycling scrapped materials, but also for research and development of recycling technology. Likewise, Matsushita, as the leader in the domestic home electric and electronic equipment industry, has been consistently working on environmental protection initiatives that appropriately meet the standards set forth in the Recycling Law or other relevant laws or regulations, including those regarding water and land-soil anti-pollution.

 

In January 2003, the Company announced that disposed electric equipment that contained polychlorinated byphenyls (PCB) might be buried in the ground of its four manufacturing facilities and one former manufacturing facility in Japan. The applicable laws in Japan require that PCB equipment be appropriately maintained and disposed of by July 2016. The Company estimated the total cost of approximately 8 billion yen for necessary actions, such as investigating whether the PCB equipment is buried at the facilities, including excavations, and maintaining and disposing the PCB equipment that is already discovered, which amount has been accrued since it represents management’s best estimate or minimum of the cost, but the payments are not considered to be fixed and reliably determinable.

 

In Europe, two environmental directives went into force in February 2003 and 25 member states are currently drawing up their state laws. One of these directives is the WEEE Directive designed to promote the recycling of electric and electronic equipments, and the other is the RoHS Directive that practically prohibits the use of six specified hazardous substances (Lead, Mercury, Cadmium, Hexavalent chromium, Polybrominated biphenyls, Polybrominated diphenyl ethers) in products. Matsushita is carrying out its compliance programs not only to meet the requirements of these two directives but also to establish cost efficient systems that will further enhance its competitive edge.

 

Following in the footsteps of these EU directives, an increasing number of recycling and hazardous substance-related legislations are being enacted worldwide. Based on its corporate policy of “contributing to the coexistence with the global environment,” Matsushita is implementing appropriate measures to address these legislations at each business domain company and in each region.

 

The Company is subject to a number of other government regulations in Japan and overseas, but overall, it presently manages to operate its business without any significant difficulty or financial burden in coping with them.


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C. Organizational Structure

 

In order to maintain production, sales and service activities effectively in broad business areas as a comprehensive electronics manufacturer, Matsushita has been operating under a decentralized divisional management structure with substantial delegation of authority to divisional companies and subsidiaries, with the headquarters focusing on Groupwide strategic functions. In January 2003, Matsushita launched a new business domain-based organizational structure, and introduced new Group management control systems from April 1, 2003. Under this new structure, each business domain company, either an internal divisional company of the parent company or a subsidiary, takes full responsibility for R&D, manufacturing and sales in its own business area, thereby establishing an autonomous management structure that expedites self-completive business operations to accelerate growth.

 

Principal divisional companies and subsidiaries as of March 31, 2004 are as listed below:

 

  (1) Internal divisional companies of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.:

 

Name of internal divisional company


   

Semiconductor Company

 

Panasonic AVC Networks Company

 

Panasonic Automotive Systems Company

 

Panasonic System Solutions Company

 

Matsushita Home Appliances Company

 

Packaged Air-Conditioner Company

 

Healthcare Business Company

 

Lighting Company

 

Motor Company

 
   

 

  (2) Principal domestic subsidiaries:

 

Name of company


   Percentage
owned


 

Panasonic Communications Co., Ltd.

   100.0 %

Matsushita Electronic Components Co., Ltd.

   100.0  

Panasonic Mobile Communications Co., Ltd.

   100.0  

Panasonic Factory Solutions Co., Ltd.

   100.0  

Matsushita Ecology Systems Co., Ltd.

   100.0  

Matsushita Refrigeration Company

   100.0  

Matsushita Battery Industrial Co., Ltd.

   100.0  

Matsushita Kotobuki Electronics Industries, Ltd.

   100.0  

Matsushita Industrial Information Equipment Co., Ltd.

   100.0  

Victor Company of Japan, Ltd.

   52.6  


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  (3) Principal overseas subsidiaries:

 

Name of company


   Country of
incorporation


   Percentage
owned


 

Matsushita Electric Corporation of America

   U.S.A.    100.0 %

Matsushita Electric Europe (Headquarters) Ltd.

   U.K.    100.0  

Panasonic Mobile & Automotive Systems Czech s.r.o.

   Czech    100.0  

Matsushita Electric Asia Pte. Ltd.

   Singapore    100.0  

Panasonic AVC Networks Singapore Pte. Ltd.

   Singapore    100.0  

Panasonic AVC Networks Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Sdn. Bhd.

   Malaysia    100.0  

Matsushita Electric (Taiwan) Co., Ltd.

   Taiwan    69.8  

Matsushita Electric (China) Co., Ltd.

   China    100.0  

Guangzhou Matsushita Air-Conditioner Co., Ltd.

   China    67.8  

 

Note:

   Matsushita’s consolidated financial statements as of March 31, 2004 comprise the accounts of 372 consolidated companies, with 59 companies reflected by the equity method.

 

 

D. Property, Plants and Equipment

 

The Company’s principal executive offices and key research laboratories are located in Kadoma, Osaka, Japan.

 

Matsushita’s manufacturing plants are located principally in Japan, other countries in Asia, North and South America and Europe. The Company considers all of its factories well maintained and suitable for current production requirements.


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The following table sets forth information as of March 31, 2004 with respect to manufacturing facilities:

 

Location


 

Floor Space
(thousands of

square feet)


    

Principal Products Manufactured


Osaka

  8,693         

VCRs, PDP TVs, DVD products, audio equipment, washing machines, other home appliances, information equipment, industrial equipment, components, batteries, kitchen fixtures.

Kanagawa

  3,711         

Communications, information and measuring equipment, VCRs, audio equipment, car AV equipment, compact discs, refrigerators, batteries.

Shiga

  3,535         

Air conditioners, refrigerators, compressors, vacuum cleaners.

Tochigi

  1,798         

TVs, TV picture tubes, information equipment.

Nara

  1,948         

Home appliances, gas and kerosene equipment, and DVD discs.

Okayama

  1,982         

VCRs, components, magnetic tapes and discs.

Kyoto

  1,975         

Semiconductors, components.

Ibaraki

  590         

Magnetic tapes.

Shikoku

  2,811         

VCRs, information equipment, home appliances.

Kyushu

  3,285         

Information and communications equipment, components, industrial equipment.

North America

  6,968         

TVs, home appliances, VCRs, DVD discs, car audio equipment, communications equipment, components, batteries.

Europe

  3,899         

VCRs, PDP TVs, TVs, audio equipment, car audio equipment, home appliances, components, information and communications equipment.

Asia
(excluding  China)

  19,297         

TVs, VCRs, DVD products, audio equipment, air conditioners, refrigerators, other home appliances, components, semiconductors, information and communications equipment, industrial equipment, compressors, batteries.

China

  7,226         

TVs, PDP TVs, DVD products, audio equipment, air conditioners, washing machines, other home appliances, car audio equipment, communications equipment, semiconductors, industrial equipment, compressors, components, batteries.

Other

  16,235         

Home appliances, industrial equipment, components, semiconductors, video and audio equipment, batteries, information and communications equipment.

   
      

Total

  83,953           
   
      

 

Substantially all of the above facilities and properties are fully owned by the Company.

 

In addition to its manufacturing facilities, Matsushita’s properties all over the world include sales offices located in various cities with an aggregate floor space of approximately 8.7 million square feet, research and development facilities with an aggregate floor space of approximately 6.0 million square feet, employee housing and welfare facilities with an aggregate floor space of approximately 10.1 million square feet, and administrative offices with an aggregate floor space of approximately 22.0 million square feet.


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As of March 31, 2004, Matsushita leased approximately 19.0 million square feet of floor space, most of which was for sales office space.

 

Substantially all of Matsushita’s properties are free of material encumbrances and Matsushita believes such properties are in adequate condition for their purposes and suitably utilized. During fiscal 2004, there was no material problem, regarding both the productive capacity and the extent of utilization of the Company’s properties.

 

In terms of environmental issues, all of the Matsushita Group’s properties operate in compliance with governmental and municipal laws and regulations. Furthermore, the Company established a number of internal environmental guidelines which are stricter than those provided by the authority. In case any occasional non-compliance may take place, such as the previously mentioned PCB issue, Matsushita takes immediate and appropriate actions to meet the regulatory requirements and to ensure current good utilization standards.

 

For fiscal 2005, the Company will make a capital investment of approximately 340 billion yen, for the purpose of production of new products and enhancement of production capacity and efficiency with a focus on such areas as AV and information and communications equipment (approximately 93 billion yen), and electronic components and devices including semiconductors and key devices (approximately 132 billion yen).

 

The investments stated above will be funded mainly through internal sources.

 

Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects

 

A. Operating Results

 

Overview

 

Matsushita is one of the world’s leading producers of electronic and electric products. Matsushita currently offers a comprehensive range of products, systems and components for consumer, business and industrial use based on sophisticated electronics and precision technology. Most of Matsushita’s products are marketed under “Panasonic,” its principle brand name, and several other brand names, including “National,” “Technics,” “Quasar,” “Victor” and “JVC.” Matsushita divides its businesses into five segments: AVC Networks, Home Appliances, Components and Devices, JVC and Other. “AVC Networks” includes video and audio equipment, and information and communications equipment. “Home Appliances” includes home appliances and household equipment. “Components and Devices” includes electronic components, semiconductors, electric motors and batteries. “JVC” includes products marketed under the brand name of JVC or Victor. “Other” includes electronic-parts-mounting machines, industrial robots and industrial equipment.

 

Matsushita’s results of operations and financial condition are affected by the economic environment in the markets in which it conducts its business, including Japan, other countries in Asia, the United States and Europe, as well as by fluctuations of exchange rates between the Japanese yen, the currency used in Matsushita’s financial statements, and other key currencies in which Matsushita receives revenues for sales of its products overseas, primarily the U.S. dollar and the euro.


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Economic environment

 

The Japanese economy over the last three fiscal years was generally characterized by uncertainty and slow growth following the long continued stagnancy in the 1990’s. In the year ended March 31, 2002, economic growth in Japan slowed from the preceding year’s temporary recovery, due to sluggish consumer spending and exports, along with setbacks in demand for information technology (IT) and related products. In the first half of the year ended March 31, 2003, the Japanese economy showed signs of a pickup, with a revival in exports and consumer spending growth. The economic recovery, however, did not last long, and the second half of that year again met stagnant consumer spending and a decline in exports. In the year ended March 31, 2004, economic growth in Japan showed moderate improvement as a result of rising exports and increased capital investment. Reflecting the aforementioned factors, Japan’s real gross domestic product showed instability but slight signs of recovery from the worst period, recording a 1.2% decrease in fiscal 2002, a 1.1% increase in fiscal 2003, and a 3.3% increase in fiscal 2004.

 

Overseas, the U.S. economy showed signs of a recovery in the year ended March 31, 2002, and its moderate growth continued in the year ended March 31, 2003, despite the war in Iraq. During the same period, growth of Asian economies was somewhat slow, except for China, and European economies also experienced slow growth. In the year ended March 31, 2004, the overseas economy was generally favorable owing to the continuously steady advances in the U.S. and Chinese economies, although post-war Iraq and other unstable factors remained.

 

During the three-year period ended March 31, 2004, Japan experienced deflation due mainly to sluggish consumer spending and an increased inflow of products manufactured in low-cost countries. The consumer price index in Japan declined 1.0% in the year ended March 31, 2002 and declined 0.6% again in the year ended March 31, 2003. In the year ended March 31, 2004, the consumer price index continued to fall, recording a decline of 0.2%. This deflationary trend has been reflected in the declining prices of goods and services in Japan, putting pressure on the earnings of Japanese businesses.

 

Condition of foreign currency exchange rates and Matsushita’s policy

 

Foreign currency exchange rates fluctuated during the three-year period ended March 31, 2004. In the year ended March 31, 2002, the Japanese yen weakened against the U.S. dollar and the euro. In the following two years, the yen strengthened against the U.S. dollar but weakened against the euro. In order to alleviate the effects of currency-related transaction risks, Matsushita has traditionally used several currency risk hedging methods, such as forward foreign-exchange contracts and currency options contracts with leading banks. Matsushita has also increased matching of export and import exchange contracts. As a basic countermeasure against currency exchange risk, the Company has been strengthening production operations outside Japan to meet overseas demand, while reducing dependence on exports from Japan. The Company does not have any material unhedged monetary assets, liabilities or commitments denominated in currencies other than the individual operation’s functional currency.


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Initiatives implemented by Matsushita

 

In the face of the aforementioned severe economic environment, Matsushita introduced, in April 2001, its mid-term business plan, Value Creation 21, which covered the three-year period ended March 31, 2004. Under the theme “Deconstruction and Creation” of the plan, the Company implemented a variety of major Companywide restructuring initiatives to transform itself into a “lean and agile Matsushita” and, from the year ended March 31, 2003 (fiscal 2003), gradually shifted its focus to growth strategies, which include the development and introduction of differentiated products, such as “V-products,” the launch of a business domain-based Groupwide organizational structure and the expansion of overseas operations as a “growth engine” for the entire Company. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita continued to carry out business domain-based restructuring initiatives, while accelerating its growth strategies. (For details of the Value Creation 21 plan, see Section A of Item 4.)

 

Summary of operations

 

Matsushita’s consolidated sales and earnings results during the last three fiscal years, reflecting the aforementioned external and internal conditions, can be summarized as follows:

 

In fiscal 2002, net sales declined 9.1% to 7,074 billion yen. Although sales of video and audio equipment in the AVC Networks category rose, reflecting steady growth in digital AV equipment, sales in almost all other sectors dropped from the previous year. Specifically, information and communications equipment in the AVC Networks category and products in the Components and Devices category were negatively affected by a worldwide downturn in IT-related industries. A global setback in corporate capital investment also caused a steep fall in sales of FA and other industrial equipment. In addition to these sales declines, the Company incurred various restructuring expenses under the Value Creation 21 plan, including 164 billion yen related to employment restructuring programs, such as additional retirement allowances for special early retirement programs, 86 billion yen related to business restructuring expenses for the closure/integration of several manufacturing sites. Furthermore, Matsushita incurred a write-down of 92 billion yen on investments. Reflecting these adverse factors, along with corporate tax effects and a decrease in minority interests due to negative earnings of certain subsidiaries, the Company incurred a net loss of 428 billion yen.

 

In fiscal 2003, net sales increased 4.6% to 7,402 billion yen, led by video and audio equipment in the AVC Networks category and products in the Components and Devices category, largely on the success of V-products developed through integration of Matsushita’s Groupwide technological resources. Despite the positive effects on earnings of this sales increase and the previous year’s employment and business restructuring, the Company incurred a net loss of 19 billion yen, due in part to a write-down on investment securities, equity losses caused by losses of certain associated companies and losses related to adjustments of net deferred tax assets necessitated by the introduction of a pro-forma standard corporate taxation system in Japan.


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In fiscal 2004, net sales increased 1.1% to 7,480 billion yen, led by strong sales of V-products, particularly digital AV products, cellular phones and factory automation (FA) equipment, which were sufficient to offset sales declines in the Components and Devices and JVC categories. The sales increase positively affected earnings. In addition, Matsushita recorded a 72 billion yen gain from the transfer to the Japanese government of the substitutional portion of Japanese Welfare Pension Insurance (JWPI) that the Company and certain of its subsidiaries operated on behalf of the Japanese government. Meanwhile, Matsushita incurred restructuring charges of 45 billion yen for early retirement programs at certain domestic group companies, and losses of 52 billion yen on valuation of investment securities, mainly stocks of affiliated companies. Reflecting all these factors, and despite an increase in minority interests due to improved earnings of certain subsidiaries and equity losses of certain associated companies, the Company recorded a net income of 42 billion yen.

 

Key performance indicators

 

The following are performance measures that Matsushita believes are key indicators of its business results for the last three fiscal years.

 

     Yen (billions) (%)

 
     Fiscal year ended March 31,

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Net sales

   7,480     7,402     7,074  

Income (loss) before income taxes to net sales ratio

   2.3 %   0.9 %   (7.6 )%

Research and development costs to net sales ratio

   7.7 %   7.4 %   8.0 %

Total assets

   7,438     7,835     7,768  

Stockholders’ equity

   3,452     3,178     3,248  

Stockholders’ equity to total assets ratio

   46.4 %   40.6 %   41.8 %

Capital investment

   271     251     320  

Free cash flow

   404     687     38  

 

Matsushita defines “Capital investment” as purchases of property, plant and equipment on an accrual basis which reflects the effects of timing differences between acquisition dates and payment dates. Matsushita has included the information concerning capital investment because its management uses this indicator to manage its capital expenditures and it believes that such indicator is useful to investors to present accrual basis capital investments in addition to the cash basis information in its consolidated cash flow statement.

 

The following table shows a reconciliation of capital investment to purchases of property, plant and equipment and intangible and other assets:

 

     Yen (billions)

 
     Fiscal year ended March 31,

 
     2004

    2003

   2002

 

Purchases of property, plant and equipment shown as capital expenditures in consolidated statements of cash flows

   276     247    342  

Effects of timing difference between acquisition dates and payment dates

   (5 )   4    (22 )
    

 
  

Capital investment

   271     251    320  
    

 
  


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Matsushita defines “Free cash flow” as the sum of net cash provided by operating activities and net cash used in investing activities. Matsushita has included the information concerning free cash flow because its management uses this indicator, and it believes that such indicator is useful to investors, to assess its cash availability after financing of its capital projects.

 

The following table shows a reconciliation of free cash flow to net cash provided by operating activities:

 

     Yen (billions)

 
     Fiscal year ended March 31,

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Net cash provided by operating activities

   489     698     113  

Net cash used in investing activities

   (85 )   (11 )   (75 )
    

 

 

Free cash flow

   404     687     38  
    

 

 

 

Consolidation of Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd. and PanaHome Corporation

 

As outlined in Section A of Item 4 and further discussed in Section D of this Item 5, on April 1, 2004, Matsushita increased its holding of shares of common stock of Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd. (MEW) from 31.8% to 51.0%, and MEW became a consolidated subsidiary of Matsushita. Also, as a result of that acquisition, PanaHome Corporation (PanaHome), in which Matsushita and MEW each own a 27.0% equity ownership, became a consolidated subsidiary of Matsushita, with Matsushita owning a 54.0% equity ownership. For fiscal periods starting on or after April 1, 2004, beginning with the first quarter of fiscal 2005, these two companies and their respective group companies are fully consolidated in Matsushita’s consolidated financial statements. Also, for fiscal periods starting on or after April 1, 2004, for financial reporting purposes, Matsushita has created the new business segment “MEW and PanaHome” for the business of MEW, PanaHome and their respective group companies.

 

 

Details of Matsushita’s consolidated sales and earnings results were as follows:

 

Year ended March 31, 2004 compared with 2003

 

(1) Sales

 

Consolidated net sales for fiscal 2004 increased 1.1% to 7,480 billion yen, from 7,402 billion yen in the previous year. As mentioned earlier, the business environment during fiscal 2004 remained unstable but overall economic conditions began to show signs of a moderate recovery. Amid these circumstances, Matsushita aimed to increase sales and enhance profitability through the launch of a new series of competitive V-products, particularly those in the digital AV equipment area. The Company also expanded simultaneous global product introductions as a means of increasing market share and securing profits at an early stage in product life cycles. As a result of these initiatives, consolidated sales marked gains, led by strong sales of V-products, particularly in the areas of digital AV equipment, cellular phones and FA equipment, which were sufficient to offset sales declines in the Components and Devices, and JVC categories.


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Domestic sales edged up 0.7% to 3,478 billion yen. Although sales of products in the Home Appliances, Components and Devices, and Other categories remained at the same level as, or below the previous year, sales of products in the AVC Networks category, especially flat-panel TVs, DVD equipment and automotive electronics increased. Overseas sales were 4,002 billion yen, up 1.4% when translated into yen and up 4.0% on a local currency basis, with sales increases recorded in the AVC Networks, Home Appliances and Other categories.

 

(2) Other Revenues (Revenue excluding Net Sales)

 

Other revenues include interest income, dividends received, and other miscellaneous income. Of these, interest income decreased 12.1% to 20 billion yen, and dividends received increased 21.5% to 5 billion yen. In addition, Matsushita recorded a 72 billion yen non-recurring gain from the transfer to the Japanese government of the substitutional portion of JWPI, following the enactment of changes to the Welfare Pension Insurance Law. The Company believes this transfer has reduced the risks of managing plan assets related to the substitutional portion of JWPI. (For further details, see Note 10 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.) Other income totaled 60 billion yen, a 7.9% decrease from fiscal 2003 when the Company recorded a one-time gain from the sale of Panasonic Disc Services Corporation.

 

(3) Costs and Expenses

 

Despite the increase in net sales, cost of sales decreased 0.2% to 5,313 billion yen, reflecting a success in reducing materials costs. Selling, general and administrative expenses edged up 1.0% to 1,971 billion yen due mainly to an increase in research and development costs. Meanwhile, interest expense decreased 15.4% to 28 billion yen, owing to a reduction in the Company’s borrowings. Other deductions increased 32.2% to 154 billion yen. Other deductions in fiscal 2004 include restructuring charges of 45 billion yen for early retirement programs at certain domestic group companies, 20 billion yen of other expenses associated with the closure/integration of manufacturing locations. Under the newly inaugurated business domain-based organizational structure, several Group companies carried out closure/integration for certain of their facilities that suffered losses from operation. Expenses for these restructuring activities were paid or settled in fiscal 2004 and no liability existed as of March 31, 2004. The Company also incurred 12 billion yen for impairment losses on fixed assets, and a write-down of 52 billion yen on investment securities, mainly stocks of affiliated companies. (For further details, see Notes 4, 5, 7 and 8 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)

 

(4) Income before Income Taxes

 

As a result of the above-mentioned factors, income before income taxes increased 147.9% to 171 billion yen, compared with 69 billion yen in fiscal 2003. Its ratio to net sales increased 1.4% to 2.3%, compared with 0.9% in the previous year.

 

(5) Provision for Income Taxes

 

Provision for income taxes amounted to 99 billion yen, compared with 71 billion yen in the previous year. Its ratio to income before income taxes decreased to 57.7%, from 103.4% a year ago. This drop is caused mainly by a decrease in adjustments of net deferred tax assets to reflect the reduction in the statutory income tax rate due to revisions to local enterprise income tax laws on the introduction of a new pro-forma standard taxation system in Japan, as well as a decrease in valuation allowance allocated to income tax expenses.


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(6) Minority Interests

 

Minority interests increased to 20 billion yen for fiscal 2004, compared with 6 billion yen in fiscal 2003, reflecting the earnings improvements of several subsidiaries.

 

(7) Equity in Earnings (Losses) of Associated Companies

 

Equity in losses of associated companies decreased to 11 billion yen, from the previous year’s 12 billion yen, due mainly to improved earnings or decreased losses at certain associated companies.

 

(8) Net Income (Loss)

 

As a result of all the factors stated in the preceding paragraphs, the Company recorded a net income of 42 billion yen for fiscal 2004, compared with a net loss of 19 billion yen in the previous fiscal year.

 

(9) Results of Operations

 

Results of operations by business segment for fiscal 2004, as compared with the previous fiscal year, were as follows*:

 

  * As described in Note 19 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, from fiscal 2004, the Company changed its business segment classifications to five new segments: AVC Networks, Home Appliances, Components and Devices, JVC and Other. Prior year figures have been restated to reflect this change.

 

     Yen (billions)

        
     2004      2003         
    
     (Restated)

     Percent
change


 

Sales:

                    

AVC Networks

   3,840      3,668      4.7 %

Home Appliances

   1,223      1,197      2.1  

Components and Devices

   1,660      1,710      (2.9 )

JVC

   819      852      (3.8 )

Other

   949      819      15.8  

Eliminations

   (1,011 )    (844 )    —    
    

  

  

Total

   7,480      7,402      1.1 %
    

  

  

Segment profit:

                    

AVC Networks

   129      83      55.9 %

Home Appliances

   53      45      16.6  

Components and Devices

   50      31      60.5  

JVC

   25      22      12.9  

Other

   15      13      12.7  

Corporate and eliminations

   (77 )    (67 )    —    
    

  

  

Total

   195      127      54.5 %
    

  

  


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Sales in the AVC Networks segment increased 4.7% to 3,840 billion yen, from 3,668 billion yen in the previous fiscal year. Within this segment, sales of video and audio equipment increased, due mainly to growth in sales of such digital AV products as flat-panel TVs and DVD recorders, which more than offset declines in CRT TVs, VCRs and audio equipment. Sales of information and communications equipment also increased owing mainly to strong sales of automotive electronics and cellular phones, although sales of fixed-line telephones and facsimile machines decreased.

 

With respect to this segment, profit increased from 83 billion yen for fiscal 2003, to 129 billion yen for fiscal 2004. This increase was attributable mainly to higher sales in digital AV equipment, cellular phones and car electronics equipment, as well as positive effects of cost rationalization efforts.

 

Sales of Home Appliances increased 2.1% to 1,223 billion yen. Certain seasonal products recorded sales declines in Japan, but these were offset by solid sales of products such as washing machines, dishwashers and ventilation fans.

 

Profit in this segment rose 16.6% from 45 billion yen for fiscal 2003, to 53 billion yen for fiscal 2004. This increase was due mainly to the successful introduction of new value-added products and overseas sales growth, combined with the effects of various rationalization efforts.

 

Sales of Components and Devices decreased 2.9% to 1,660 billion yen. While semiconductor sales recorded solid gains, led by system LSIs for digital AV equipment, sales declines in general components and electronic tubes led to lower sales overall in this segment.

 

With respect to this segment, profit increased from 31 billion yen for fiscal 2003, to 50 billion yen for fiscal 2004, owing largely to positive effects through the increased plant operating rate on higher sales in semiconductors, which more than offset the negative effects of decreased sales and price declines in general components and certain other product lines.

 

Sales of JVC were 819 billion yen, down 3.8% from the previous year. Despite sales increases of flat-panel TVs and DVD recorders, overall sales of consumer electronics in Japan and the Americas declined, particularly in such products as CRT TVs and VCRs.

 

With respect to this segment, profit increased from 22 billion yen for fiscal 2003, to 25 billion yen for fiscal 2004, owing to such factors as a reduction in materials procurement costs and a decrease in personnel and other fixed costs, despite the decrease in sales and the effects of price declines.

 

Sales in the Other segment were 949 billion yen, up 15.8% from the previous year. FA equipment, especially modular placement machines increased overseas.

 

With respect to this segment, profit increased from 13 billion yen for fiscal 2003, to 15 billion yen for fiscal 2004, owing to sales increases of FA equipment.


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Year ended March 31, 2003 compared with 2002

 

(1) Sales

 

Consolidated net sales for fiscal 2003 increased 4.6% to 7,402 billion yen from 7,074 billion yen in the previous year. The business environment during fiscal 2003 was characterized by slow economic growth and persistent instability. Amid such an environment, Matsushita introduced 88 strategic V-products in Japan and overseas. The Company also implemented comprehensive Groupwide business and organizational restructuring, launching a new business domain-based management structure in January 2003 to accelerate the Company’s growth strategy. As a result of these initiatives, consolidated sales marked gains, led by video and audio equipment in the AVC Networks category and products in the Components and Devices category, with both categories benefiting from the success of V-products. An upward turn in sales of the Home Appliances category was also a positive factor.

 

Domestic sales increased 4.2% to 3,454 billion yen, with growth achieved in all major product categories. The AVC Networks category, especially video and audio equipment, and the Components and Devices category, especially devices for digital AV equipment, led the sales increases in Japan. Overseas sales were 3,948 billion yen, up 5.0% when translated into yen and up 4.3% on a local currency basis, with sales increases recorded in all major product categories, except for information and communications equipment of the AVC Networks category.

 

(2) Other Revenues (Revenue excluding Net Sales)

 

Other revenues include interest income, dividends received and other income. Of these, interest income decreased 35.2% to 22 billion yen, and dividends received also decreased 45.2% to 5 billion yen. Other income increased 19.4% to 65 billion yen due mainly to a gain from the sale of Panasonic Disc Services Corporation.

 

(3) Costs and Expenses

 

Despite the increase in net sales, cost of sales remained mostly flat, increasing only 0.2% to 5,324 billion yen, and selling, general and administrative expenses edged down 0.5% to 1,952 billion yen. Meanwhile, interest expense decreased 27.2% to 33 billion yen, owing to a reduction in the Company’s borrowings. Other deductions also decreased 70.2% to 116 billion yen, reflecting substantially reduced restructuring charges compared with the previous fiscal year. Other deductions in fiscal 2003 include 12 billion yen expensed as additional retirement allowances for early retirement programs of a domestic subsidiary and a write-down of 53 billion yen on investment securities. The expenses for these early retirement programs were paid or settled during fiscal 2003 and no liability existed as of March 31, 2004. In the previous fiscal year, Matsushita implemented aforementioned Companywide structural reforms to increase profitability and efficiency. In the process of these structural reforms, the Company incurred other deductions of 164 billion yen related to employment restructuring programs, such as additional retirement allowances for special early retirement programs, and 86 billion yen related to business restructuring expenses, such as impairment losses and other expenses associated with the closure or integration of several manufacturing locations. The expenses for these activities were paid or settled through fiscal 2003 and no liability existed as of March 31, 2004. The Company also recorded a write-down of 92 billion yen on investment securities during fiscal 2002. (For further details, see Notes 5, 7 and 15 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)


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(4) Income (Loss) before Income Taxes

 

As a result of the above-mentioned factors, income (loss) before income taxes turned to an income of 69 billion yen, compared with a pretax loss of 538 billion yen in fiscal 2002.

 

(5) Provision for Income Taxes

 

Provision for income taxes amounted to an expense of 71 billion yen, compared with a benefit of 53 billion yen in the previous year. Its ratio to income (loss) before income taxes increased to 103.4% of pretax income, from 9.9% of pretax loss a year ago. This increase is caused mainly by adjustments of net deferred tax assets to reflect the reduction in the statutory income tax rate due to revisions to local enterprise income tax laws on the introduction of a new pro-forma standard taxation system in Japan, as well as an increase in valuation allowance allocated to income tax expenses.

 

(6) Minority Interests

 

Minority interests increased to 6 billion yen for fiscal 2003, compared with a negative 57 billion yen in fiscal 2002, reflecting the earnings improvements or a turnaround from losses of several subsidiaries.

 

(7) Equity in Earnings (Losses) of Associated Companies

 

Equity in earnings (losses) of associated companies decreased to a loss of 12 billion yen, from the previous year’s profit of 59 million yen, due mainly to losses of certain associated companies.

 

(8) Net Income (Loss)

 

As a result of all the factors stated in the preceding paragraphs, the Company recorded a net loss of 19 billion yen for fiscal 2003, compared with a net loss of 428 billion yen in the previous fiscal year.


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(9) Results of Operations

 

Results of operations by business segment for fiscal 2003, as compared with fiscal 2002, were as follows*:

 

  * As mentioned above, the Company changed its business segment classifications in fiscal 2004. Accordingly, the following prior year figures are presented on a restated basis to reflect this change.

 

     Yen (billions)

        
     2003
(Restated)


     2002
(Restated)


     Percent
change


 

Sales:

                    

AVC Networks

   3,668      3,509      4.5 %

Home Appliances

   1,197      1,171      2.3  

Components and Devices

   1,710      1,535      11.4  

JVC

   852      835      2.0  

Other

   819      725      12.9  

Eliminations

   (844 )    (701 )    —    
    

  

  

Total

   7,402      7,074      4.6 %
    

  

  

Segment profit (loss):

                    

AVC Networks

   83      (36 )    —   %

Home Appliances

   45      33      38.7  

Components and Devices

   31      (96 )    —    

JVC

   22      (12 )    —    

Other

   13      (32 )    —    

Corporate and eliminations

   (67 )    (56 )    —    
    

  

  

Total

   127      (199 )    —   %
    

  

  

 

AVC Networks sales increased 4.5% to 3,668 billion yen, from 3,509 billion yen in the previous year. This increase was due mainly to sharp growth in sales of digital AV equipment, such as flat-panel TVs and DVD recorders, and automotive electronics products, as well as strong sales of cellular phones overseas, although sales of PC peripherals and audio equipment overseas waned.

 

With respect to this segment, profit increased from a loss of 36 billion yen for fiscal 2002, to a profit of 83 billion yen for fiscal 2003. The sharp increase in segment profit was attributable mainly to higher sales in video and audio equipment, particularly digital AV equipment, and the improvement in communications equipment, as well as positive effects of the previous year’s restructuring initiatives.

 

Sales of Home Appliances increased 2.3% to 1,197 billion yen. Weak consumer spending and lower housing investment led to falling overall demand and a generally severe market in Japan. However, through the introduction of new products, Matsushita recorded increased domestic sales. In addition, an upturn in overseas sales also contributed to the overall sales increase in this segment. By product line, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners and microwave ovens supported domestic growth, while overseas sales increases were led by growth in air conditioners and refrigerators.


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Profit in this segment rose 38.7% from 33 billion yen for fiscal 2002, to 45 billion yen for fiscal 2003. This was due mainly to the successful introduction of new products and overseas sales increases, combined with the effects of various restructuring initiatives.

 

Sales of Components and Devices increased 11.4% to 1,710 billion yen. Sales of product lines, such as general electronic components and semiconductors, driven by V-products, showed strong growth in both the Japanese and overseas markets, and contributed to double-digit growth for this product segment as a whole.

 

With respect to this segment, profit increased from a loss of 96 billion yen for fiscal 2002, to a profit of 31 billion yen for fiscal 2003, principally owing to increased sales of components and devices for digital AV equipment and mobile communications equipment, combined with the effects of restructuring initiatives implemented in the previous fiscal year.

 

Sales of JVC were 852 billion yen, up 2.0% from the previous year. Despite sales decreases of digital video cameras and DVD players in the Americas, sales of AV equipment such as digital video cameras and TVs in Europe and Japan increased.

 

Profit in this segment increased from a loss of 12 billion yen for fiscal 2002, to a profit of 22 billion yen for fiscal 2003, owing mainly to such factors as sales increases and materials cost reduction.

 

Sales of Other were 819 billion yen, up 12.9% from the previous year. Sales of FA equipment centered on modular placement machines led the growth.

 

With respect to this segment, profit improved from a loss of 32 billion yen for fiscal 2002, to a profit of 13 billion yen for fiscal 2003, reflecting the sales gains mentioned above and positive effects of restructuring initiatives.

 

B. Liquidity and Capital Resources

 

Matsushita’s Policy on Financial Position and Liquidity

 

As its basic policy, Matsushita has long placed emphasis on maintaining sound balance sheets, and on generating as much available funding as possible from internal sources through efforts to raise the operational efficiency or asset turnover ratios, so as not to overly rely on external fund raising. This conservativeness is exemplified in the tradition of maintaining the ratio of stockholders’ equity to total assets at a relatively high level and keeping a large cash balance. The ratio of stockholders’ equity to total assets as of March 31, 2004 stood at 46.4%, and the total of short-term borrowings and long-term debt was 751 billion yen as of March 31, 2004, down from 922 billion yen a year ago. Cash balance (the total of cash and cash equivalents of 1,275 billion yen plus time deposits with a maturity of more than three months of 170 billion yen) also remained at the relatively high level of 1,445 billion yen as of March 31, 2004, although it decreased from the year-earlier 1,563 billion yen (the total of cash and cash equivalents of 1,167 billion yen plus time deposits of 396 billion yen).


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In order to facilitate access to global capital markets, Matsushita obtains credit ratings from the world’s two leading credit rating agencies, Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. (Moody’s) and Standard & Poor’s Rating Services (S&P). In addition, Matsushita maintains credit ratings from Rating and Investment Information, Inc. (R&I), a rating agency nationally recognized in Japan, primarily for access to the Japanese capital markets. As of March 31, 2004, Matsushita’s debt ratings are: Moody’s: Aa3(long-term); S&P: A+(long-term, outlook: stable), A-1(short-term); and R&I: AA+(long-term), a-1+(short-term).

 

Within the rating classification system of R&I, “a-1” is the highest of five categories for short-term debt and indicates “a strong degree of certainty regarding debt repayment,” with a plus (+) sign added to a rating in that category to indicate an especially high degree of certainty regarding debt repayment; and “AA” is the second highest of nine categories for long-term debt and indicates “a very high degree of certainty regarding debt repayment,” with a plus (+) or minus (-) sign added to a rating in that category to indicate its relative standing within that category.

 

Matsushita believes that its credit ratings include the rating agencies’ assessment of the general operating environment, its positions in the markets in which it competes, reputation, movements and volatility in its earnings, risk management policies, liquidity and capital management. An adverse change in any of these factors could result in a reduction of Matsushita’s credit ratings, and that could, in turn, increase its borrowing costs and limit its access to the capital markets or require it to post additional collateral and permit counterparties to terminate transactions pursuant to certain contractual obligations.

 

With the above-mentioned cash balance, combined with the generally high credit ratings from leading credit rating agencies, Matsushita believes that it has sufficient sources of liquidity for either working capital or long-term investment needs.

 

As of March 31, 2004, the outstanding balance of short-term borrowings totaled 290 billion yen, and long-term debt was 461 billion yen. Matsushita’s borrowings are not significantly affected by seasonal factors. (For further details, see Note 9 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.) Most borrowings are at fixed rates.

 

In recent years, Matsushita has focused on raising capital efficiency upon review of its balance sheet. As a part of this move, the Company initiated an endeavor to achieve more efficient utilization of available cash resources held by subsidiaries and associated companies. This is achieved by lending such cash resources to other Group companies, as necessary, through a network of cash management systems at the corporate headquarters and financial subsidiaries located in each global region.

 

Furthermore, with the launch of the business domain-based Groupwide organizational structure in early 2003, Matsushita has revised its system of evaluating the business performance of operating divisions (now, business domain companies), effective April 1, 2003. The system now used is based on two results-based standards, namely Capital Cost Management (CCM), which measures capital efficiency, and cash flows, which represents a company’s ability to generate cash. Both of these standards, that are deemed to share interests with investors, are applied to each business domain company’s performance on a global consolidated basis. Regarding cash flows, Matsushita uses free cash flow as an important indicator to evaluate its performance.

 

Regarding the use of financial instruments for hedging purposes, see Item 11.


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Fiscal 2004 Financial Position and Liquidity

 

The Company’s consolidated total assets as of the end of fiscal 2004 decreased to 7,438 billion yen, compared with 7,835 billion yen at the end of fiscal 2003. The decrease was mainly the result of increased capital efficiency achieved through the reduction of assets such as trade receivables and property, plant and equipment, and a decrease of deferred tax assets included in other assets.

 

Regarding liabilities, the balance of retirement and severance benefits decreased as a result of the transfer to the Japanese government of the substitutional portion of JWPI mentioned earlier.

 

Stockholders’ equity increased to 3,452 billion yen, compared with 3,178 billion yen at the end of fiscal 2003. This increase was due mainly to a decrease in minimum pension liability adjustments, owing to the factors related to retirement and pension programs. (For further details, see Note 10 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.) Furthermore, an increase in unrealized holding gains on available-for-sale securities, which resulted in a decrease in accumulated other comprehensive loss, also affected the increase in stockholders’ equity, despite an increase in the negative balance of cumulative translation adjustments caused by the appreciation of the Japanese yen. Stockholders’ equity to total assets ratio increased 5.8% to 46.4% from 40.6% at the end of fiscal 2003. In addition, Matsushita again repurchased its own shares, as an integral part of the Company’s financial strategy to improve shareholder value.

 

Capital investment (excluding intangibles) during fiscal 2004 totaled 271 billion yen, an increase of 7.9% from the previous fiscal year’s total of 251 billion yen. (For a reconciliation of capital investment to the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure, see “Overview—Key performance indicators” in Section A of this Item 5.) Matsushita curbed capital investment in a number of business areas, in line with increasing management emphasis on cash flows and capital efficiency. Matsushita did, however, selectively invest in facilities for those product areas that are expected to drive future growth, including such key components and devices as semiconductors, PDPs and other strategic areas.

 

Depreciation (excluding intangibles) during the fiscal year fell to 254 billion yen, compared with 283 billion yen in the previous fiscal year.

 

Net cash provided by operating activities in fiscal 2004 amounted to 489 billion yen, compared with 698 billion yen in the previous fiscal year. This decrease, despite the improvement in net income, was attributable mainly to an increase in inventories to meet anticipated strong demand for digital AV products related to the 2004 Olympic games and the non-cash gain from the aforementioned transfer to the Japanese government of the substitutional portion of JWPI included in net income. Net cash used in investing activities amounted to 85 billion yen, compared with 11 billion yen in fiscal 2003, due mainly to a decrease in proceeds from disposition of investments and advances and an increase in investment and advances, despite a decrease in time deposits. Net cash used in financing activities was 273 billion yen, compared with 443 billion yen in fiscal 2003. This was attributable mainly to smaller decreases in short-term borrowings, and decreases in repayments of long-term debt and in repurchases of the Company’s common stock. All these activities, compounded by the effect of exchange rate fluctuations, resulted in a net increase of 108 billion yen in cash and cash equivalents during fiscal 2004. Cash and cash equivalents at the end of fiscal 2004 totaled 1,275 billion yen, compared with 1,167 billion yen a year ago. These are held primarily in yen (72%), U.S. dollars (7%) and Euro (4%).


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Free cash flow in fiscal 2004 amounted to 404 billion yen, compared with 687 billion yen in fiscal 2003. (For a reconciliation of free cash flow to the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure, see “Overview—Key performance indicators” in Section A of this Item 5.)

 

Commitments for Capital Expenditures

 

As of March 31, 2004, commitments outstanding for the purchase of property, plant and equipment amounted to 16 billion yen.

 

 

C. Research and Development

 

Matsushita considers research and development (R&D) to be a key factor in its success and essential to the achievement of its corporate theme: to provide the utmost satisfaction to customers throughout the world through differentiated products and services and to contribute to the progress and happiness of mankind. Under this theme, Matsushita is committed to R&D activities that create next-generation businesses from a mid- to long-term viewpoint, while at the same time supporting current or ongoing products and businesses. Also, to address the 21st century’s needs for more convenient lifestyles around the evolving “ubiquitous” networking society and coexistence with the environment, the main focus of Matsushita’s R&D activities has been increasingly directed to digital networks and environmental technologies. Matsushita has concurrently been strengthening its global R&D networks to meet the needs of its overseas business expansion.

 

In fiscal 2001 through 2002, as part of its Value Creation 21 plan, Matsushita conducted a thorough review of all corporate-wide R&D organizations spanning various product divisions in a decentralized manner. As a result of this review, and to enable concentration of R&D resources into strategic areas, Matsushita established a “Strategic Product Platforms” structure in December 2001. Matsushita also established a development center or development task force for each business domain, concentrating all relevant development resources. Concurrently, to develop the basic and common technologies that support these strategic products, Matsushita established corporate-level “Core Technology Platforms,” which are responsible for the following areas: multimedia software technology; semiconductor technology; devices, environment and production engineering technologies; and cutting-edge technologies.

 

In fiscal 2003, Matsushita accelerated the development of V-products that would propel a sharp recovery in business performance through R&D efforts conducted through the above-mentioned new R&D structure. In these efforts, the Company places an emphasis on creation of its own “black-box” or proprietary technologies which cannot be easily imitated by competitors. Matsushita also implemented the “Technology Business Plan” to further increase R&D efficiency and strengthen technology management. Based on this plan, Matsushita created a system that infuses management resources in areas of comparative strength through the introduction of a scientific R&D management approach and objective evaluations of the Company’s technological competitiveness.


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In fiscal 2004, Matsushita realigned technological management categorization and systems to further increase efficiency in R&D. In corporate R&D functions, to encourage engineers to concentrate on prioritized R&D themes and leading-edge technologies, Matsushita introduced a new management system with which it can administrate themes at each step in the research process. In business domain companies’ R&D functions, Matsushita significantly reduced lead time for product development by introducing an innovative R&D process management, developed from the standpoint of return on investment. Furthermore, Matsushita formulated its “10-year Technology Vision” as a Companywide strategy to step up development of products with high potential, such as next-generation system LSIs, networking electronic home appliances and fuel cell co-generation systems. Meanwhile, to minimize escalating software development costs in areas such as digital consumer electronics, the Company established a software development site in China. Matsushita also aggressively promoted technological collaboration and industrial partnerships to further strengthen R&D capabilities. As part of this effort, the Company established the R&D Academia Collaboration Center to advance cooperative activities with prominent universities in Japan for the development of key, next-generation technologies. Besides these initiatives, the Company also reinforced its intellectual property rights initiatives by revitalizing patent application filings worldwide.

 

Research and development costs amounted to 567 billion yen, 551 billion yen and 579 billion yen for the three fiscal years ended March 31, 2002, 2003 and 2004, respectively, representing 8.0%, 7.4% and 7.7% of Matsushita’s total net sales for each of those periods.

 

 

D. Trend Information

 

To increase profitability and efficiency through structural reforms and a new growth strategy, Matsushita implemented the three-year Value Creation 21 plan in fiscal 2002. As part of this plan, the Company has effected various management reforms and restructuring initiatives as mentioned earlier. Also, under this plan, the Company commenced new growth strategies in fiscal 2003 and 2004. These included the strategic development and introduction of competitive V-products and the launch of a new business domain-based Group organizational structure. Under the new structure, business domain companies take full responsibility for R&D, manufacturing and sales in their respective business areas. Matsushita also embarked on a plan to strengthen overseas operations as a corporate growth engine.

 

As a result of these initiatives, Matsushita achieved a turnaround in net income in fiscal 2004 from the net loss in the preceding two fiscal years. The Company also achieved some improvements in its balance sheets in fiscal 2004 as mentioned earlier. (See Liquidity and Capital Resources in section B of this Item 5.)

 

Regarding the business environment for fiscal 2005, while Matsushita expects the Japanese economy to maintain gradual recovery, it views other global economies, beginning with the United States, with cautious optimism. Furthermore, Matsushita expects that trends toward a strong Japanese yen and increasing raw materials prices will continue. Amid such an environment, Matsushita embarked on its new mid-term “Leap Ahead 21” plan from fiscal 2005. Based on the plan, the Company will strive to maintain growth by increasing sales through aggressive promotion of V-products, and to enhance Groupwide profitability and cash flows by further promoting autonomous management at each business domain company. (For further details about the Leap Ahead 21 plan, see Section A of Item 4.)


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In the first year of the Leap Ahead 21 plan, Matsushita will implement still more business and employment restructuring programs at several of its business domain companies with the goal of enhancing their earnings base and cost competitiveness. Matsushita currently expects approximately 80 billion yen to be incurred as expenses or charges associated with these restructuring programs in fiscal 2005.

 

On April 1, 2004, upon completion of a tender offer, Matsushita acquired 19.2% of the issued shares of common stock of Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd. (MEW), in which Matsushita had already held a 31.8% equity ownership. Matsushita paid a total of 147 billion yen in cash to acquire the 19.2% equity ownership through the tender offer. This acquisition also resulted in the acquisition of a controlling interest in PanaHome Corporation (PanaHome) because the Company and MEW each have 27.0% equity ownership in PanaHome. Accordingly, MEW, PanaHome and their respective group companies became consolidated subsidiaries of Matsushita on April 1, 2004.

 

MEW is a comprehensive manufacturer of housing/building-related products, personal-care products, devices and plastic materials based in Osaka, Japan. MEW’s net sales amounted to 1,233 billion yen and net income was 20 billion yen for its fiscal year ended November 30, 2003. PanaHome is a builder of various types of residential houses based in Osaka, Japan. PanaHome’s net sales amounted to 264 billion yen and net income was 1 billion yen for its fiscal year ended March 31, 2004. MEW’s and PanaHome’s consolidated financial information above was prepared, for local reporting purposes, in conformity with financial reporting practices generally accepted in Japan.

 

The Company’s new basis of investment in MEW and PanaHome upon the acquisition of additional shares of MEW was 344 billion yen. Of this new basis of investment, approximately 11 billion yen was preliminarily allocated to intangible assets based on the current status of the valuation process. (For further details about MEW and PanaHome, see Note 20 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)

 

By joining forces with these companies, Matsushita expects to become a leading provider of a comprehensive range of home electric and household equipment and systems in Japan. It also expects to reduce costs through economies of scale and sharing of research and development resources and marketing channels.

 

Through the aforementioned initiatives and joining of the MEW and PanaHome group companies, Matsushita currently expects to attain further improvement in earnings on a solid increase in sales in fiscal 2005, subject to external conditions including currency exchange volatility and the success of its growth strategies for the year.

 

For fiscal 2005, Matsushita projects its capital investment will total approximately 340 billion yen, including 40 billion yen capital investment of the MEW and PanaHome group companies. Matsushita will concentrate investment in such strategic areas as core components and devices, including semiconductors and plasma display panels, with construction of new factories for system LSIs and PDPs in Japan.

 

The discussion above includes forward-looking statements. For details about “Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements,” see page 1.


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E. Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

 

The Company established sale-leaseback arrangements for manufacturing machinery and equipment, and sale of trade accounts receivable without recourse, as off-balance sheet arrangements in order to reduce its total assets.

 

In fiscal 2002, Matsushita sold machinery and equipment, which are used to manufacture semiconductors for 108 billion yen. The assets were sold to a special-purpose entity, which in turn leased them back to Matsushita over a period of four years. Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation provided to the special-purpose entity a loan with the same terms as those of the resulting leases. The loan paid for approximately 88% of the cost of the machinery and equipment. SMBC Leasing Company, Limited, an affiliate of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, owns, through the special-purpose entity, an equity interest in the machinery and equipment, representing approximately 12% of the cost. Matsushita also entered into a similar sale-leaseback arrangement in the amount of 8 billion yen for machinery and equipment, which are used to manufacture semiconductors in August 2002. In March 2003, these contracts were modified to change the lessor to SMBC Leasing Company. Matsushita also entered into another sale-leaseback arrangement directly with SMBC Leasing Company in the amount of 15 billion yen for machinery and equipment used for manufacturing plasma display panels in December 2002. In fiscal 2004, Matsushita and a subsidiary also established another sale-leaseback arrangement where SMBC Leasing Company performs as a lessor in the amount of 45 billion yen for machinery and equipment used for manufacturing semiconductors and plasma display panels. These leases are classified as operating leases for U.S. GAAP purposes. (For further details, see Notes 6 and 18 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)

 

In addition, the Company provides several types of guarantees and similar arrangements. (For further details, see Note 18 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)

 

 

F. Tabular Disclosure of Contractual Obligations

 

The two tables below show Matsushita’s cash payment obligations and guarantees and other commercial commitments, broken down by the payment amounts due for each of the periods specified below, as of March 31, 2004:

 

     Yen (millions)

     Payments Due by Period

     Total

   Less than
1 year


  

1-3

years


   4-5
years


   After 5
years


Contractual Obligations:

                        

Long-Term Debt Obligations

   667,727    212,677    298,867    55,699    100,484

Capital Lease Obligations

   10,087    4,498    5,067    360    162

Operating Lease Obligations

   121,272    33,035    70,407    17,829    1

Purchase Obligations

   15,535    15,535    —      —      —  
    
  
  
  
  

Total Contractual Cash Obligations

   814,621    265,745    374,341    73,888    100,647
    
  
  
  
  


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     Yen (millions)

    
     Total Amounts
Committed


    

Other Commercial Commitments:

         

Letters of Credit

   6,663     

Guarantees

   30,905     
    
    

Total Commercial Commitments

   37,568     
    
    

 

Letters of credit generally have contractual lives of less than one year. Loan guarantees are principally provided on behalf of employees, associated companies, customers and consolidated subsidiaries and generally have long-term contractual lives coinciding with the maturities of the guaranteed obligations. (For further details, see Notes 6, 9 and 18 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)

 

G. Safe Harbor

 

Not applicable

 

H. Accounting Principles

 

Critical Accounting Policies

 

The Company has identified the following critical accounting policies which are important to its financial condition and results of operations, and require management’s judgment.

 

Long-lived Assets

 

The useful lives of long-lived assets are summarized in Note 1(h) of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in this annual report and reflect the estimated period that the Company expects to derive economic benefit from their use. In estimating the useful lives and determining whether subsequent revisions to the useful lives are necessary, the Company considers the likelihood of technological obsolescence, changes in demand for the products related to such assets, and other factors which may affect their utilization of the long-lived assets. The effect of any future changes to the estimated useful lives of the long-lived assets could be significant to the Company’s results of operations.

 

Long-lived assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amounts of assets may not be recoverable. Recoverability of assets to be held and used is measured by a comparison of the carrying amount of an asset to future net cash flows (undiscounted and without interest charges) expected to be generated by the asset. If such assets are considered to be impaired, the impairment to be recognized is measured by the amount by which the carrying amount of the asset exceeds the fair value of the asset. Assets to be disposed of are reported at the lower of the carrying amount or fair value less selling costs. Factors which may contribute to the need for future impairment charges include changes in the use of assets resulting from the Company’s restructuring initiatives, technological changes or any significant declines in the demand for related products.


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Valuation of Investment Securities

 

The Company holds available-for-sale securities, equity method securities and cost method securities, included in short-term investments and investments and advances. Available-for-sale securities are carried at fair value with unrealized holding gains and losses included as a component of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), net of applicable taxes.

 

Individual securities are reduced to net realizable value by a charge to earnings for other than temporary declines in fair value. Management regularly reviews each investment security for impairment based on criteria that include the extent to which cost exceeds market value, the duration of that market decline and the financial health of and specific prospects for the issuer. Because such specific information may become available after the Company makes the impairment evaluation, and whether the impairment is other-than-temporary depends upon future events that may or may not occur, the Company may be required to recognize an other-than-temporary impairment in the future. Determination of whether a decline in value is other than temporary requires judgment. At March 31, 2004, the Company has recorded 419 billion yen of available-for-sale securities, 229 billion yen of equity method securities that have market values, and 592 billion yen of equity method securities that do not have market values, cost method securities and advances, part or all of which could be determined to be other-than-temporarily impaired in future periods, depending on changes to the current facts and assumptions.

 

For further discussion on valuation of investment securities, see Notes 4 and 5 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in this annual report.

 

Valuation of Inventory

 

Inventories are stated at the lower of cost, determined on a first-in, first-out basis, or net realizable value. Net realizable value is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less the estimated costs of completion and the estimated costs necessary to make a sale. The Company routinely reviews its inventories for their salability and for indications of obsolescence to determine if inventories should be written-down to net realizable value. Judgments and estimates must be made and used in connection with establishing such allowances in any accounting period. In estimating the net realizable value of its inventories, the Company considers the age of the inventories and the likelihood of spoilage or changes in market demand for its inventories.

 

Warranties

 

The Company makes estimates of potential warranty claims related to its goods sold. The Company provides for such costs based upon historical experience and its estimate of the level of future claims. Management makes judgments and estimates in connection with establishing the warranty reserve in any accounting period. Differences may result in the amount and timing of its revenue for any period if management makes different judgments or utilizes different estimates.

 

Valuation of Accounts Receivable and Noncurrent Receivables

 

The Company reviews its accounts receivable on a periodic basis and provides an allowance for doubtful receivables based on historical loss experience and current economic conditions. In evaluating the collectibility of individual receivable balances, the Company considers the age of the balance, the customers’ historical payment history, their current credit-worthiness and adequacy of collateral.


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The Company records noncurrent receivables, representing loans from finance lease transactions, at cost, less the related allowance for impaired receivables. A loan is considered to be impaired when, based on current information and events, it is probable that the Company will be unable to collect all amounts due according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement. When a loan is considered to be impaired, the amount of impairment is measured based on the present value of expected future cash flows or the fair value of the collateral. Cash receipts on impaired receivables are applied to reduce the principal amount of such receivables until the principal has been recovered and are recognized as interest income thereafter. Management’s judgment is required in making estimates of the future cash flows of an impaired loan. Such estimates are based on current economic conditions and the current and expected financial condition of the debtor.

 

Valuation of Goodwill

 

Goodwill is tested for impairment on an annual basis, or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that the goodwill may be impaired, such as an adverse change in business climate. Impairment is recorded if the fair value of goodwill is less than its carrying amount. The fair value determination used in the impairment assessment requires estimates based on quoted market prices, prices of comparable businesses, present value or other valuation techniques, or a combination thereof, necessitating management to make subjective judgments and assumptions. These estimates and assumptions could result in significant differences to the amounts reported if underlying circumstances were to change. At March 31, 2004, the Company has recorded 419 billion yen of goodwill, part or all of which could be determined to be impaired in future periods, depending on changes to the current facts and assumptions. For further discussion on goodwill and other intangible assets, see Note 8 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in this annual report.

 

Valuation of Deferred Tax Assets

 

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 based on available evidence. 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. Management considers the scheduled reversal of deferred tax liabilities, projected future taxable income, and tax planning strategies in making this assessment.

 

At March 31, 2004, the Company has recorded gross deferred tax assets of 1,040 billion yen with a total valuation allowance of 246 billion yen. Included in the gross deferred tax assets is 181 billion yen resulting from net operating loss carryforwards (NOLs) of 484 billion yen, which are available to offset future taxable income. In order to fully realize these NOLs, the Company will need to generate sufficient taxable income by the expiration of these NOLs. A substantial majority of these NOLs will expire in fiscal 2009 and thereafter. 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 will realize the benefits of these deductible differences, net of the existing valuation allowance at March 31, 2004 based on available evidence. The Company could be required to increase the valuation allowance if such assumptions would change concluding that the Company would not be able to generate sufficient taxable income. For further discussion on valuation of deferred tax assets, see Note 11 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in this annual report.


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Retirement and Severance Benefits

 

Retirement and severance benefits costs and obligations are dependent on assumptions used in calculating such amounts. The discount rate and expected return on assets are the most critical assumptions among others, including retirement rates, mortality rates and salary growth.

 

While management believes that the assumptions used are appropriate, actual results in any given year could differ from actuarial assumptions because of economic and other factors. The resulting difference is accumulated and amortized over future periods and therefore, generally affect the Company’s retirement and severance benefit cost and obligations.

 

The Company determines discount rates by looking to rates of return on high-quality fixed income investments, and the expected long-term rate of return on pension plan assets by considering the current and expected asset allocations, as well as historical and expected returns on various categories of plan assets.

 

Decreases in discount rates lead to increases in benefit obligations which, in turn, could lead to an increase in amortization cost through amortization of actuarial gain or loss, and vice versa. A decrease of 50 basis points in the discount rate is expected to increase the projected benefit obligation by approximately nine percent.

 

A decline in market stock values generally results in a lower expected rate of return on plan assets, which would result in an increase of future retirement and severance benefit costs.

 

Accounting for Derivatives

 

The Company has limited involvement with derivative financial instruments and does not use them for trading purposes. The Company uses derivative instruments principally to manage foreign currency risks resulting from transactions denominated in currencies other than the Japanese yen. As discussed in Note 1(o) of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in this annual report, the Company recognizes all derivatives as either assets or liabilities on the balance sheet at their fair values. Changes in the fair value of a derivative are reported in earnings or other comprehensive income depending on their use and whether they qualify for hedge accounting. The accounting for gains and losses associated with changes in the fair value of the derivative depends on its hedge designation and whether the hedge is highly effective in achieving offsetting changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item. The Company evaluates and determines on a continuous basis if the derivative remains highly effective in offsetting changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item. If the derivative ceases to be highly effective in offsetting changes in the fair value or cash flows of the hedged item, the Company discontinues hedge accounting prospectively. Because the derivatives the Company uses are not complex, significant judgment is not required to determine their fair values. Fair values are determined principally by receiving quotations from banks or brokers.


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Loss Contingencies

 

Loss contingencies may from time to time arise from situations such as product liability claims, warranty claims, disputes over intellectual property rights, environmental remediation obligations, and other legal actions. Loss contingencies are recorded as liabilities when it is probable that a liability has been incurred and the amount of the loss is reasonably estimable. Disclosure is required when there is a reasonable possibility that the ultimate loss will exceed the recorded provision. Contingent liabilities are often resolved over long time periods. In recording liabilities for probable losses, management is required to make estimates and judgments regarding the amount or range of the probable loss. Management continually assesses the adequacy of estimated loss contingencies and, if necessary, adjusts the amounts recorded as better information becomes known.

 

Item 6. Directors, Senior Management and Employees

 

A. Directors and Senior Management

 

The Articles of Incorporation of the Company provide that the number of Directors of the Company shall be three or more and that of Corporate Auditors shall be three or more. Directors and Corporate Auditors shall be elected by the general meeting of shareholders. The Board of Directors has ultimate responsibility for administration of the Company’s affairs. Directors may, by resolution of the Board of Directors, appoint a Chairman of the Board of Directors, a Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors, a President and Director, and one or more Executive Vice Presidents and Directors, Senior Managing Directors and Managing Directors, as well as Representative Directors. The Chairman of the Board of Directors, Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors, President and Director, Executive Vice Presidents and Directors, and Senior Managing Directors are Representative Directors and severally represent the Company. The term of office of Directors shall, under the Articles of Incorporation of the Company, expire at the conclusion of the ordinary general meeting of shareholders with respect to the last closing of accounts within one year from their assumption of office, and in the case of Corporate Auditors, within four years from their assumption of office. However, they may serve any number of consecutive terms.

 

The Corporate Auditors of the Company are not required to be, and are not, certified public accountants. However, at least one of the Corporate Auditors shall be a person who has not been a Director, corporate executive officer, general manager or employee of the Company or any of its subsidiaries during the five-year period prior to his or her assumption of office as a Corporate Auditor. After the conclusion of the ordinary general meeting of shareholders to be held in June 2006, at least half of the Corporate Auditors shall be required to be persons who have not been a Director, corporate executive officer, general manager or employee of the Company or its subsidiaries, prior to his or her assumption of office as a Corporate Auditor. Each Corporate Auditor has the statutory duty to audit the non-consolidated financial statements (and, after the conclusion of the ordinary general meeting of shareholders with respect to fiscal 2004, consolidated financial statements) and business reports to be submitted by the Board of Directors at the general meeting of shareholders and also to audit the Director’s execution of their duties. The Corporate Auditors are required to attend meetings of the Board of Directors and express opinions, if necessary, at such meetings, but they are not entitled to vote.


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The Corporate Auditors constitute the Board of Corporate Auditors. The Board of Corporate Auditors has a statutory duty to prepare and submit its audit report to a Representative Director each year. A Corporate Auditor may note his or her opinion in the audit report if his or her opinion is different from the opinion expressed in the audit report. The Board of Corporate Auditors is empowered to establish auditing policies, the manner of investigation of the status of the corporate affairs and assets of the Company, and any other matters relating to the execution of the duties of the Corporate Auditors. However, the Board of Corporate Auditors may not prevent each Corporate Auditor from exercising his or her powers.

 

Corporate Auditors may not at the same time be directors, corporate executive officers, managers or employees of the Company or any of its subsidiaries.

 

Under the Commercial Code of Japan (Commercial Code) and the Articles of Incorporation of the Company, the Company may, by a resolution of the Board of Directors, exempt Directors or Corporate Auditors from their liabilities owed to the Company arising in connection with their failure to perform their duties to the extent permitted by the Commercial Code. In addition, the Company has entered into liability limitation agreements with each of the Outside Directors which limits the maximum amount of their liabilities owed to the Company arising in connection with their failure to perform their duties to the extent permitted by the Commercial Code.

 

The Company implemented in fiscal 2004 the reform of its corporate management and governance structure by (i) reorganizing the role of the current Board of Directors, (ii) introducing a Matsushita’s own Executive Officer system* in its Group and (iii) strengthening its Corporate Auditor system, all tailored to the Group’s new business domain-based, autonomous management structure. (For details of the Groupwide reorganization, see explanation of the “Value Creation 21” plan in, Section A of Item 4.)

 

Matsushita’s Executive Officer system was introduced to address the diversity of business operations over the entire Group through delegation of authority and to help integrate the comprehensive strengths of all Group companies in Japan and overseas. The Board of Directors appoints Executive Officers mainly from the senior management personnel of business domain companies, such as internal divisional companies and subsidiaries, as well as from management personnel responsible for overseas subsidiaries and certain senior corporate staff. The Executive Officers assume responsibility as the Group’s executives regarding execution of business. The Executive Officers may be given such titles as Senior Managing Executive Officer, Managing Executive Officer and Executive Officer, depending on the extent of responsibility and achievement of each individual. The term of office of the Executive Officers shall be one year from their assumption of office. Each of the Executive Officers has the authority to operate businesses for which such Executive Officer is responsible, under the supervision of the Board of Directors and in accordance with the Board of Directors’ decisions of the management regarding corporate affairs.

 


* Matsushita’s Executive Officer (“Yakuin”) system is a voluntary system and different from the corporate executive officer (“Shikkoyaku”) system that large Japanese corporations may adopt at their option under the new statutory corporate governance system referred to as “Company with Committees” system stipulated in the Commercial Code of Japan and related legislation, which became effective on April 1, 2003.


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The Board of Directors has, at the same time, been reformed in order to concentrate its role to establish corporate strategies and to supervise implementation thereof by the Executive Officers. The Company has reduced the number of Directors to facilitate more effective decision-making, and shortened their term of office to one year in order to clarify their responsibilities. Taking into consideration the diversified scope of Matsushita’s business operations, the Company has chosen to hold its policy of having management personnel, who are well-versed in day-to-day operations at operational fronts, be members of the Board of Directors, while Outside Directors continue to fully participate in such meetings.

 

Furthermore, compensation for members of the Board of Directors and Executive Officers is linked to the new business performance evaluation standards, namely CCM and cash flows, which are similar to the evaluation standards used by capital markets, to pursue management based on shareholder interests and enhance corporate value.

 

In fiscal 2004, the non-statutory full-time Senior Auditors were newly appointed within the Company’s internal divisional companies in order to strengthen auditing functions at each business domain company. In addition, the Company has also launched the “Group Auditor’s Meeting” in order to promote collaboration between the Company’s Corporate Auditors, the non-statutory full-time Senior Auditors of the internal divisional companies and the corporate auditors of the Company’s subsidiaries and affiliates.

 

The following table shows information about Matsushita’s Directors and Corporate Auditors as of June 29, 2004, including their dates of birth, positions, responsibilities and brief personal records.

 

        Name  


  

Positions, responsibilities and brief personal records


(Date of birth)     

Yoichi Morishita

(Jun. 23, 1934)

  

Chairman of the Board of Directors—since June 2000

-1987    Director of the Company;

-1992    Executive Vice President and Director of the Company;

-1993    President and Director of the Company.

Masayuki Matsushita

(Oct. 16, 1945)

  

Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors—since June 2000

-1986    Director of the Company;

-1990    Managing Director of the Company;

-1992    Senior Managing Director of the Company;

-1996    Executive Vice President and Director of the Company.

Kunio Nakamura

(Jul. 5, 1939)

  

President and Director—since June 2000

-1993    Director of the Company, and Director of Corporate  Management Division for the Americas;

    

-1996    Managing Director of the Company;

-1997    Senior Managing Director of the Company, and President of  AVC Company.


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        Name  


  

Positions, responsibilities and brief personal records


(Date of birth)     

Kazuo Toda

(Feb. 13, 1941)

  

Executive Vice President and Director—since June 2003

In charge of Corporate Marketing Division for Panasonic Brand and National Brand, Corporate Sales Strategy Division for National / Panasonic Retailers, Commodity Products and Electrical Supplies Sales, Advertising, Logistics, Corporate CS Division, Design, Network Marketing Strategy Office, and Chairman of Corporate Brand Committee.

-1994    Director of the Company, and in charge of Home Appliance  Business;

    

-1996    Managing Director of the Company;

-1997    President of Home Appliance & Housing Electronics  Company;

-1999    Senior Managing Director of the Company;

-2000    President of AVC Company;

-2001    Director of Corporate Marketing Division for Panasonic  Brand.

Osamu Tanaka

(Nov. 1, 1940)

  

Executive Vice President and Director—since June 2003

Representative in Tokyo, and in charge of External Relations, Panasonic Center and Panasonic System Solutions Company.

-1995    Director of the Company, and Director of Corporate Consumer  Sales Division;

-1997    Managing Director of the Company;

-1999    Senior Managing Director of the Company, and in charge of  Corporate Consumer Sales;

    

-2001    In charge of Corporate Consumer Products Distribution  Division and Public and Private Institutions.

Yukio Shohtoku

(Nov. 8, 1939)

  

Executive Vice President and Director—since June 2003

In charge of Overseas Operations, Global Strategy Research Institute, Corporate Overseas Planning Group and Corporate International Affairs Group, Vivendi Universal Liaison Office and Olympic Affairs.

-1994    Director of the Company, and Director of Corporate  Management Division for China;

    

-1999    Managing Director of the Company.

Takami Sano

(Apr. 2, 1943)

  

Senior Managing Director—since June 2003

President of Panasonic Automotive Systems Company, and in charge of Industrial Sales and Panasonic EV Energy Co., Ltd.

-1997    Senior Managing Director of Matsushita Battery Industrial  Co., Ltd.;

    

-1998    Director of the Company, and Director of Corporate Industrial  Marketing & Sales Division;

    

-2000    Managing Director of the Company;

-2002    President of Factory Automation Company;

-2003    President of Panasonic Automotive Systems Company.


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        Name  


  

Positions, responsibilities and brief personal records


(Date of birth)     

Susumu Koike

(Nov. 15, 1945)

  

Senior Managing Director—since June 2003

In charge of Technology, Devices and Environmental Technology, Production Engineering, Intellectual Property, Overseas Research Laboratories, and President of Semiconductor Company and Camera Module Business.

-1998    Senior Managing Director of Matsushita Electronics  Corporation, Director of the Company, and in charge of  Semiconductor Technology;

    

-2000    Managing Director of the Company;

-2001    President of Semiconductor Company.

Fumio Ohtsubo

(Sep. 5, 1945)

  

Senior Managing Director—since June 2003

President of Panasonic AVC Networks Company, and in charge of Storage Device Business and Digital Network Strategic Planning Office.

-1998    Director of the Company, and Vice President of AVC  Company;

-2000    Managing Director of the Company;

-2001    Business Group Executive of AVC Network Business Group;

-2002    President of AVC Company;

-2003    President of Panasonic AVC Networks Company.

Tetsuya Kawakami

(Dec. 7, 1941)

  

Senior Managing Director—since June 2004

In charge of Finance and Accounting.

-1996    General Manager of Corporate Accounting Department;

-2000    Director of the Company, and in charge of Accounting;

-2003    Managing Director of the Company, and in charge of Finance  and Accounting.

Hidetsugu Otsuru

(Aug. 20, 1943)

  

Managing Director—since June 2001

In charge of Facility Management, Quality Assistance and Environment Affairs and Recycling Business Promotion.

-1998    Director of the Company (resigned in March 1999), and in  charge of Corporate Quality Administration Division and  Purchasing Administration Department;

    

-1999    President of Matsushita Electronics Corporation;

-2001    President of Display Devices Company.


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        Name  


  

Positions, responsibilities and brief personal records


(Date of birth)     

Yoshitaka Hayashi

(Jun. 7, 1946)

  

Managing Director—since June 2003

In charge of Home Appliances Business, and President of Matsushita Home Appliances Company, and in charge of Healthcare Business Company and Matsushita Refrigeration Company.

-1999    Vice President of Home Appliance & Housing Electronics  Company;

-2000    Director of the Company, and President of Home Appliance &  Housing Electronics Company;

    

-2001    Director of Corporate Marketing Division for National Brand,  and in charge of Healthcare & Medical Business Center;

    

-2002    In charge of Appliance Business;

-2003    President of Home Appliances Company.

Toshihiro Sakamoto

(Oct. 27, 1946)

  

Managing Director—since June 2004

In charge of Planning, and Associate Director of Corporate Management Quality Innovation Division and Corporate IT Innovation Division, and in charge of Panasonic Spin-up Fund.

-1998    President of Matsushita Electric (Taiwan) Co., Ltd.;

-2000    Director of the Company, and Vice President of AVC  Company;

-2001    Senior Vice President of AVC Company;

-2003    In charge of Corporate Planning.

Josei Ito

(May 25, 1929)

  

Director—since June 1994

(Chairman of the Board of Nippon Life Insurance Co.)

-1989    President of Nippon Life Insurance Co.;

-1997    Chairman of the Board of Nippon Life Insurance Co.

Toshio Morikawa

(Mar. 3, 1933)

  

Director—since June 2000

(Special Advisor of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation)

-1997    Chairman of the Board of The Sumitomo Bank, Ltd.;

-2001    Advisor of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation;

-2002    Special Advisor of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation.

Masaki Akiyama

(Jun. 29, 1943)

  

Director—since June 2004

President of Panasonic System Solutions Company, and in charge of Corporate eNet Business Division.

-1998    Senior Managing Director of Matsushita Communication  Industrial Co., Ltd.;

    

-2000    Director of Corporate Systems Solutions Division of the  Company;

-2001    Director of the Company (resigned in June 2003) and Director  of Corporate Broadband Systems Division of AVC Company;

-2003    President of Panasonic System Solutions Company.


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        Name  


  

Positions, responsibilities and brief personal records


(Date of birth)     

Shinichi Fukushima

(Nov. 13, 1948)

  

Director—since June 2003

In charge of Personnel, General Affairs and Social Relations.

-1997    General Manager of Personnel Department.

Mikio Ito

(Nov. 29, 1946)

  

Director—since June 2004

Director of Corporate Legal Affairs Division, and in charge of Corporate Risk Management, Corporate Information Security and Business Ethics.

-1997    General Manager of Industrial Relations Department;

-2001    Assistant Director of Tokyo Branch, and General Manager of  Corporate External Relations;

-2003    Director of Tokyo Branch.

Masaharu Matsushita

(Sep. 17, 1912)

  

Honorary Chairman of the Board of Directors and Executive Advisor—since June 2000

-1947    Director of the Company;

-1961    President and Director of the Company;

-1977    Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Company.

Kazumi Kawaguchi

(Oct. 25, 1943)

  

Senior Corporate Auditor—since June 2003

-1996    Senior Managing Director of Kyushu Matsushita Electric Co.,  Ltd.;

-1999    General Manager of Affiliates Management Department of the  Company;

-2000    General Manager of Corporate Accounting Department;

-2001    In charge of Corporate Accounting Group.

Yukio Furuta

(Sep. 20, 1944)

  

Senior Corporate Auditor—since June 2004

-1995    Director of Matsushita Electronics Corporation;

-2001    Director of Corporate Manufacturing & Development Division  of Semiconductor Company;

    

-2003    Vice President of Semiconductor Company.

Yasuo Yoshino

(Oct. 5, 1939)

  

Corporate Auditor—since June 2003

(Chairman of Sumitomo Life Insurance Co.)

-1997    Deputy President of Sumitomo Life Insurance Co.;

-2001    Chairman of Sumitomo Life Insurance Co.

Ikuo Hata

(Aug. 6, 1931)

  

Corporate Auditor—since June 2004

(Attorney at Law, Oh-ebashi LPC & Partners)

-1992    President of Osaka District Court;

-1995    Registered as an attorney-at-law (Osaka Bar Association);

-1998    Vice Board Chairman of Japan Federation of Arbitration  Associations;

-2001    Member of Supreme Court Committee on Construction-related  Disputes.


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There are no family relationships among any Directors or Corporate Auditors except as described below:

 

Masayuki Matsushita, Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors is the son of Masaharu Matsushita, Honorary Chairman of the Board of Directors and Executive Advisor.

 

The following table shows information about Matsushita’s Executive Officers as of June 29, 2004, including their positions and responsibilities.

 

Name


    

                                Positions and responsibilities


Yoshiaki Kushiki

    

Managing Executive Officer

President, Panasonic Mobile Communications Co., Ltd.

Hajime Sakai

    

Managing Executive Officer

President, Panasonic Communications Co., Ltd.

Koshi Kitadai

    

Managing Executive Officer

President, Matsushita Electronic Components Co., Ltd., in charge of Electronic Circuit Capacitor Division and Toyama Matsushita Electric Co., Ltd.

Yasuo Katsura

    

Managing Executive Officer

Director, Tokyo Branch

Shunzo Ushimaru

    

Managing Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Marketing Division for Panasonic Brand, in charge of Matsushita Consumer Electronics Co., Ltd.

Toru Ishida

    

Executive Officer

President, Matsushita Battery Industrial Co., Ltd.

Tameshige Hirata

    

Executive Officer

President, Matsushita Ecology Systems Co., Ltd., in charge of Matsushita Environmental and Air-conditioning Engineering Co., Ltd.

Hideaki Iwatani

    

Executive Officer

In charge of International Affairs, Director, Global Strategy Research Institute

Yoichiro Maekawa

    

Executive Officer

In charge of External Relations

Tomikazu Ise

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Management Division for China and Northeast Asia, Chairman, Matsushita Electric (China) Co., Ltd.


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Name


    

                                    Positions and responsibilities


Fujio Nakajima

    

Executive Officer

Senior Vice President, Panasonic AVC Networks Company,

Director, AVC Development Center,

General Manager, Digital Broadcasting Business Promotion Office

Tomiyasu Chiba

    

Executive Officer

President, Matsushita Kotobuki Electronics Industries, Ltd.

Nobutane Yamamoto

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Procurement Division

Kazuyoshi Fujiyoshi

    

Executive Officer

Vice President, Panasonic Communications Co., Ltd.

Tomio Kawabe

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Management Division for Asia and Oceania, President, Matsushita Electric Asia Pte. Ltd.

Junji Esaka

    

Executive Officer

Vice President, Matsushita Home Appliances Company,

in charge of Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Business,

President, Matsushita Refrigeration Company

Takae Makita

    

Executive Officer

In charge of Information Systems, Associate Director, Corporate IT Innovation Division

Hitoshi Otsuki

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Management Division for Europe,

Chairman and CEO, Matsushita Electric Europe (Headquarters) Ltd.

Takahiro Mori

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Communications Division, in charge of CSR Office

Tsutomu Ueda

    

Executive Officer

Senior Vice President, Panasonic AVC Networks Company,

Director, Visual Products and Display Devices Business Group

Masashi Makino

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Manufacturing Innovation Division

Katsutoshi Kanzaki

    

Executive Officer

President, Panasonic Factory Solutions Co., Ltd.

Yoshinobu Sato

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Sales Strategy Division for National/Panasonic Retailers


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Name


    

                                    Positions and responsibilities


Osamu Nishijima

    

Executive Officer

Vice President, Semiconductor Company in charge of Technology, General Manager, Semiconductor Technologies Strategy Office

Joachim Reinhart

    

Executive Officer

President and COO, Matsushita Electric Europe (Headquarters) Ltd.

Yutaka Mizuno

    

Executive Officer

Vice President, in charge of Sales and Director, OEM Automotive Systems Marketing and Sales Division, Panasonic Automotive Systems Company

Yoshihiko Yamada

    

Executive Officer

Director, Corporate Management Division for North America, Chairman, Matsushita Electric Corporation of America

Kazuhiro Tsuga

    

Executive Officer

In charge of Digital Network and Software Technologies

 

(Directors who concurrently serve as Executive Officers are not included in the above list.)

 

B. Compensation

 

The aggregate amount of remuneration, including bonuses, paid by the Company during fiscal 2004 to all Directors and Corporate Auditors (34 persons) for services in all capacities was 947 million yen.

 

In accordance with customary Japanese business practices, a retiring Director or Corporate Auditor receives a lump-sum retirement payment, which is subject to approval of the general meeting of shareholders. Retirement allowances provided for Directors and Corporate Auditors for fiscal 2004 amounted to 312 million yen. (For details of the Company’s stock option plans for Board members and select senior executives, see Section E of this Item 6.)

 

C. Board Practices

 

For information on the Company’s Directors and Corporate Auditors, see Section A of this Item 6.

 

The Company has made available on its web site (http://panasonic.co.jp/global/governance/) a general summary of the significant differences between its corporate governance practices and those followed by U.S. companies under NYSE listing standards.

 

The rights of ADR holders, including their rights relating to corporate governance practices, are governed by the Amended and Restated Deposit Agreement (incorporated by reference to the Registration Statement on Form F-6 (File No. 333-12694) filed on October 4, 2000).


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D. Employees

 

The following table lists the number of consolidated full-time employees of the Company as of March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002:

 

     2004

   2003

   2002

Employees:

              

Domestic

   119,528    121,451    126,378

Overseas

   170,965    166,873    164,854
    
  
  

Total

   290,493    288,324    291,232
    
  
  

 

Most regular employees in Japan, except management personnel, are union members, principally of the Matsushita Electric Industrial Workers Union, which is affiliated with the Japanese Electrical Electronic & Information Union.

 

As is customary in Japan, Matsushita negotiates annually with the unions and executes annual wage increases. The annual bonuses of all employees are linked to the Company’s performance of the previous year. Matsushita also renews the terms and conditions of labor contracts, other than those relating to wages and bonuses, every other year. In recent years, Matsushita has introduced in Japan new comprehensive employment and personnel systems to satisfy the diversified needs of employees.

 

Such systems include an individual performance-oriented annual salary system, a regional-based employee remuneration system and an alternative payment system under which employees can receive retirement and fringe benefits up front as an addition to their semiannual bonuses. During the last few years, the Company and several subsidiaries have also implemented special early retirement programs for employees who wished to pursue careers outside Matsushita. For a quarter century, Matsushita has not experienced any major labor strikes or disputes. Matsushita considers its labor relations to be excellent.


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E. Share Ownership

 

(1) The following table lists the number of shares owned by the Directors and Corporate Auditors of the Company as of June 29, 2004. The total is 17,876,952 shares constituting 0.77% of all outstanding shares of the Company’s common stock.

 

Name


  

Position


   Number of Matsushita Shares
Owned as of June 29, 2004


Yoichi Morishita

   Chairman of the Board of Directors           85,568

Masayuki Matsushita

   Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors      7,913,351

Kunio Nakamura

   President and Director           35,000

Kazuo Toda

   Executive Vice President and Director           23,299

Osamu Tanaka

   Executive Vice President and Director           20,750

Yukio Shohtoku

   Executive Vice President and Director           30,037

Takami Sano

   Senior Managing Director           21,923

Susumu Koike

   Senior Managing Director           18,562

Fumio Ohtsubo

   Senior Managing Director           18,000

Tetsuya Kawakami

   Senior Managing Director           11,057

Hidetsugu Otsuru

   Managing Director           18,000

Yoshitaka Hayashi

   Managing Director           13,798

Toshihiro Sakamoto

   Managing Director           10,278

Josei Ito

   Director           12,000

Toshio Morikawa

   Director             5,000

Masaki Akiyama

   Director           11,884

Shinichi Fukushima

   Director             6,005

Mikio Ito

   Director             5,000

Masaharu Matsushita

   Honorary Chairman of the Board of Directors and Executive Advisor      9,598,637

Kazumi Kawaguchi

   Senior Corporate Auditor           10,803

Yukio Furuta

   Senior Corporate Auditor             5,000

Yasuo Yoshino

   Corporate Auditor             3,000

Ikuo Hata

   Corporate Auditor                —  
         

Total

        17,876,952
         

 

In May 1998, the Board of Directors decided to implement the Company’s first stock option plan for Board members and select senior executives, and to purchase the Company’s own shares for transfer to them under the plan, pursuant to then effective Article 210-2 of the Commercial Code of Japan. Upon approval at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders held in June 1998 and subsequent Board of Directors’ resolutions, stock options (rights to purchase shares of common stock) were provided to the then 32 Directors on the Board and four select senior executives in amounts ranging from 2,000 to 10,000 shares of common stock each, exercisable from July 1, 2000 to June 30, 2004, at an exercise price of 2,291 yen per share, which was calculated by a formula approved by shareholders at the said ordinary general meeting of shareholders. To cover these options, the Company in early July 1998 purchased on the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) a total of 113,000 shares of common stock with an aggregate purchase price of approximately 252 million yen.


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At the ordinary general meeting of shareholders held in June 1999, the shareholders again approved a stock option plan for Board members and select senior executives. The then 32 Directors on the Board and four select senior executives were granted stock options at a price of 2,476 yen per share, exercisable from July 1, 2001 to June 30, 2005, ranging from 2,000 to 10,000 shares of common stock each. For this purpose, the Company in early August 1999 purchased on the TSE a total of 116,000 shares of common stock with an aggregate purchase price of approximately 287 million yen.

 

In June 2000, another stock option plan for Board members and select senior executives was approved at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders. The then 28 Directors on the Board and five select senior executives were granted stock options ranging from 2,000 to 10,000 shares of common stock each, at a price of 2,815 yen per share, exercisable from July 1, 2002 through June 30, 2006. For the stock option plan, the Company in early July 2000 purchased on the TSE a total of 109,000 shares of common stock with an aggregate purchase price of approximately 306 million yen.

 

In June 2001, another stock option plan for Board members and select senior executives was approved at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders. The then 30 Directors on the Board and nine select senior executives were granted stock options ranging from 2,000 to 10,000 shares of common stock each, at a price of 2,163 yen per share, exercisable from July 1, 2003 through June 30, 2007. For the stock option plan, the Company in early July 2001 purchased on the TSE a total of 128,000 shares of common stock with an aggregate purchase price of approximately 250 million yen.

 

In June 2002, the Company obtained approval at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders regarding the issue of stock acquisition rights as stock options (the Stock Acquisition Rights) for Board members and select senior executives, pursuant to Articles 280-20 and 280-21 of the Commercial Code of Japan, as amended. Upon the shareholders’ approval, the Board of Directors adopted resolutions to issue at no charge an aggregate of 116 Stock Acquisition Rights, each representing a stock option to purchase 1,000 shares of common stock of the Company, to the then 27 Directors on the Board and eight select senior executives. The Stock Acquisition Rights are exercisable during the period from July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2008. The amount to be paid by qualified persons upon exercise of each Stock Acquisition Right is set at 1,734 yen per share of common stock, which was calculated by a formula approved by shareholders at the said ordinary general meeting of shareholders.

 

In June 2003, the Company introduced new business performance evaluation standards (See Section A of this Item 6.) which affect compensation of Directors and Executive Officers. This new evaluation system is intended to encourage pursuit of continuous growth and enhanced profitability for the Group as a whole, thereby accomplishing the goal of increasing corporate value in the interest of shareholders. Upon the introduction of this incentive type compensation system, Stock Acquisition Rights as stock options for Directors and select senior executives have not been offered since June 2003.

 

(For more details, see Note 12 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.)


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(2) The full-time employees of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. and its major subsidiaries in Japan are eligible to participate in the Matsushita Electric Employee Shareholding Association, whereby participating employees contribute a portion of their salaries to the Association and the Association purchases shares of the Company’s common stock on their behalf. The Company had uniformly provided a 10% subsidy on top of any funds employees contribute to the Association. However, from July 2004 the Company started to provide the subsidy in proportion to the number of points that each employee selects to exchange within certain limitations under the “Cafeteria Plan,” the Company’s new flexible benefit plan. Under the Cafeteria Plan, each employee is allotted a certain number of points based on prescribed standards, which he or she may exchange for various benefits, including the Company’s subsidy for contributions to the Association, housing subsidies, subsidies for asset building savings, educational assistance, hotel accommodations, etc. As of March 31, 2004, the Association owned 37,193 thousand shares of the Company’s common stock constituting 1.60% of all outstanding shares of the Company’s common stock.

 

 

Item 7. Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions

 

 

A. Major Shareholders

 

(1) To the knowledge of the Company, no shareholders beneficially own more than five percent of the Company’s common stock, which is the only class of stock it has issued. The shareholders that owned more than five percent of the Company’s common stock on the register of shareholders as of March 31, 2004 were The Master Trust Bank of Japan, Ltd. (trust account) and Japan Trustee Services Bank, Ltd. (trust account), which are securities processing services companies. The Company understands that these shareholders are not the beneficial owners of the Company’s common stock, but the Company does not have available further information concerning such beneficial ownership. The ten largest shareholders of record and their share holdings as of the end of the last fiscal year are as follows:

 

Name


  

Share ownership

(in thousands of shares)


   Percentage of
total issued
shares


The Master Trust Bank of Japan, Ltd. (trust account)

   167,220    6.81%

Japan Trustee Services Bank, Ltd. (trust account)

   165,982    6.76   

Moxley & Co.

   103,610    4.22   

Nippon Life Insurance Co.

     67,796    2.76   

Matsushita Investment & Development Co., Ltd.

     56,949    2.32   

Sumitomo Life Insurance Co.

     54,212    2.20   

Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation

     48,824    1.99   

State Street Bank and Trust Co.

     40,069    1.63   

Matsushita Electric Employee Shareholding Association

     37,193    1.51   

Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Co., Ltd.

     35,106    1.43   


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Except as otherwise provided by law or by the Company’s Articles of Incorporation, a resolution can be adopted at a general meeting of shareholders by a majority of the number of voting rights of all the shareholders represented at the meeting. The Commercial Code and the Company’s Articles of Incorporation provide, however, that the quorum for the election of Directors and Corporate Auditors shall not be less than one-third of the total number of voting rights of all the shareholders. The Company’s shareholders are not entitled to cumulative voting in the election of Directors. A corporate shareholder, more than one-quarter of whose total voting rights are directly or indirectly owned by the Company, may not exercise its voting rights in respect of the shares of common stock of the Company it owns. The Company has no voting rights with respect to its own common stock. Shareholders may exercise their voting rights through proxies, provided that the proxies are also shareholders holding voting rights. The Company’s shareholders also may cast their votes in writing, or exercise their voting rights by electronic means pursuant to the method determined by the Board of Directors.

 

The Commercial Code and the Company’s Articles of Incorporation provide that in order to amend the Articles of Incorporation and in certain other instances, including a reduction of stated capital, the removal of a Director or a Corporate Auditor, a merger or dissolution with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, the transfer of the whole or an important part of the business, the taking over of the whole of the business of any other corporation with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, share exchange or share transfer for the purpose of establishing 100% parent-subsidiary relationships with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, splitting of the corporation into two or more corporations with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, or any offering of new shares at a “specially favorable” price (or any offering of stock acquisition rights to subscribe for or acquire shares of common stock (“stock acquisition rights”) or bonds with stock acquisition rights at a “specially favorable” exercise conditions) to any persons other than shareholders, the quorum shall be one-third of the total voting rights of all the shareholders and the approval by at least two-thirds of the voting rights of all the shareholders represented at the meeting is required (the “special shareholders resolution”).

 

(2) As of March 31, 2004, approximately 10.51% of the Company’s common stock was owned by 167 United States shareholders, including the ADR Depositary’s nominee, Moxley & Co., considered as one shareholder of record, owning approximately 4.22% of the total common stock.

 

(3) Matsushita is not, directly or indirectly, owned or controlled by other corporations, by the Japanese government or any foreign government or by any natural or legal person or persons severally or jointly.

 

(4) As far as is known to the Company, there is no arrangement, the operation of which may at a subsequent date result in a change in control of Matsushita.

 

 

B. Related Party Transactions

 

Matsushita is not a party to any material related party transactions.

 

 

C. Interests of Experts and Counsel

 

Not applicable


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Item 8. Financial Information

 

A. Consolidated Statements and Other Financial Information

 

(1) Consolidated Statements

 

Refer to Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (see Item 18).

 

Finished goods and materials sent out of Japan are mainly bound for consolidated subsidiaries of the Matsushita Group, and are not, therefore, recorded as exports on a consolidated basis. For this reason, the proportion of exports to total net sales is not significant.

 

(2) Legal Proceedings

 

The appeal by Loral Fairchild to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit described in this section last year was dismissed by an Order entered by the Federal Circuit.

 

There are a number of other legal actions and administrative investigations against Matsushita. Management is of the opinion that damages, based on the information currently available, if any, resulting from these actions will not have a material effect on Matsushita’s results of operations or financial position.

 

(3) Dividend Policy

 

Maximizing benefit for shareholders has always been one of the fundamental policies of the Company. Consistent with this policy, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. (MEI) traditionally has distributed regular dividends to its shareholders on a periodic basis.

 

At the ordinary general meeting of shareholders held on June 29, 2004, a year-end cash dividend for fiscal 2004 of MEI was approved at the rate of 7.75 yen per share of common stock, consisting of a 6.25 yen ordinary dividend and 1.50 yen special dividend to commemorate the 85 th anniversary of the Company’s founding. The Company had already paid an interim dividend of 6.25 yen per share to each shareholder during the year; accordingly the annual cash dividend for fiscal 2004 was 14.00 yen per share.

 

Matsushita plans to utilize retained earnings for future business growth and to strengthen the corporate management structure.

 

B. Significant Changes

 

No significant changes have occurred since the date of the annual financial statements included in this annual report.


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Item 9. The Offer and Listing

 

 

A. Offer and Listing Details

 

The primary market for the Company’s common stock (Common Stock) is the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE). The Common Stock is traded on the First Section of the TSE and is also listed on two other stock exchanges (Osaka and Nagoya) in Japan. In addition, the Company’s Common Stock is listed on the Euronext Amsterdam Stock Exchange in the form of original Common Stock of the Company, and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in the form of co-ownership shares in a Global Bearer Certificate. In the United States, the Company’s American Depositary Shares (ADSs) have been listed on and traded in the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in the form of American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). There may from time to time be a differential between the Common Stock’s price on exchanges outside the United States and the market price of ADSs in the United States.

 

Matsushita delisted its shares from two stock exchanges (Fukuoka and Sapporo) in Japan in January 2004, the Pacific Exchange in March 2004, Euronext Paris Stock Exchange in April 2004 and Dusseldorf Stock Exchange in February 2004.

 

ADRs were originally issued pursuant to a Deposit Agreement dated as of April 28, 1970, as amended from time to time (Deposit Agreement), among the Company, the Depositary for ADRs, and the holders of ADRs. The current Depositary for ADRs is JP Morgan Chase Bank, which succeeded to this business from Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York upon their merger. Effective December 11, 2000, Matsushita again revised its ADR Deposit Agreement and executed a 10:1 ADS ratio change. As a result, one ADS now represents one share of Common Stock. ADRs evidence ADSs that represent the underlying Common Stock deposited under the Deposit Agreement with Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, as agent of the Depositary.

 

The following table sets forth for the periods indicated the reported high and low closing prices of the Company’s Common Stock on the TSE, and the reported high and low closing composite prices of the Company’s ADSs on the NYSE:

 

         Tokyo Stock Exchange

     New York Stock Exchange

        

Price per Share of

Common Stock (yen)


     Price per American
Depositary Share (dollars) *


Fiscal Year ended March 31


       High

   Low

     High

   Low

2000

       3,230    2,060      30.30    17.48

2001

       3,180    1,994      29.90    16.30

2002

       2,325    1,408      19.15    11.33

2003

       1,780    1,011      14.47    8.53

2004

       1,648    875      15.57    7.33


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     Tokyo Stock Exchange

     New York Stock Exchange

     Price per Share of
Common Stock (yen)


     Price per American
Depositary Share (dollars) *


Fiscal Year ended March 31


   High

   Low

     High

   Low

2003

                     

1st quarter

   1,780    1,528      14.47    12.27

2nd quarter

   1,682    1,259      14.29    10.36

3rd quarter

   1,303    1,121      10.88    9.37

4th quarter

   1,258    1,011      10.53    8.53

2004

                     

1st quarter

   1,189    875      10.05    7.33

2nd quarter

   1,580    1,210      13.68    10.19

3rd quarter

   1,529    1,322      14.06    12.21

4th quarter

   1,648    1,494      15.57    13.95

2005

                     

1st quarter

   1,685    1,452      15.80    12.72

Most recent 6 months


   High

   Low

     High

   Low

February, 2004

   1,593    1,503      15.13    14.31

March, 2004

   1,640    1,554      15.57    13.95

April, 2004

   1,685    1,580      15.80    14.33

May, 2004

   1,595    1,452      14.96    12.72

June, 2004

   1,580    1,485      14.60    13.21

July, 2004

   1,549    1,417      14.22    13.07

 

  * The prices of American Depositary Shares are based upon reports by the NYSE, with all fractional figures rounded up to the nearest two decimal points. The prices of ADSs, prior to the December 11, 2000 ADS ratio change, have been restated on the current basis that each ADS represents one share of Common Stock.

 

B. Plan of Distribution

 

Not applicable

 

C. Markets

 

See Section A of this Item 9.

 

D. Selling Shareholders

 

Not applicable


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E. Dilution

 

Not applicable

 

F. Expenses of the Issue

 

Not applicable

 

Item 10. Additional Information

 

A. Share Capital

 

Not applicable

 

B. Memorandum and Articles of Association

 

Organization

 

The Company is a joint stock corporation (kabushiki kaisha) incorporated in Japan under the Commercial Code (shoho) of Japan (Commercial Code). The Company is registered in the Commercial Register (shogyo tokibo) maintained by the Moriguchi Branch Office of the Osaka Legal Affairs Bureau.

 

Objects and purposes

 

Article 3 of the Articles of Incorporation of the Company provides that its purpose is to engage in the following lines of business:

 

  1. manufacture and sale of electric machinery and equipment, communication and electronic equipment, as well as lighting equipment;

 

  2. manufacture and sale of gas, kerosene and kitchen equipment, as well as machinery and equipment for building and housing;

 

  3. manufacture and sale of machinery and equipment for office and transportation, as well as for sales activities;

 

  4. manufacture and sale of medical, health and hygienic equipment, apparatus and material;

 

  5. manufacture and sale of optical and precision machinery and equipment;

 

  6. manufacture and sale of batteries, battery-operated products, carbon and manganese and other chemical and metal products;

 

  7. manufacture and sale of air conditioning and anti-pollution equipment, as well as industrial machinery and equipment;


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  8. manufacture and sale of other machinery and equipment;

 

  9. engineering and installation of machinery and equipment related to any of the preceding items as well as engineering and performance of and contracting for other construction work;

 

  10. production and sale of software;

 

  11. sale of iron and steel, nonferrous metals, minerals, oil, gas, ceramics, paper, pulp, rubber, leather, fibre and their products;

 

  12. sale of foods, beverages, liquor and other alcoholics, agricultural, livestock, dairy and marine produces, animal feed and their raw materials;

 

  13. manufacture and sale of drugs, quasi-drugs, cosmetics, fertilizer, poisonous and deleterious substance and other chemical products;

 

  14. manufacture and sale of buildings and other structures and components thereof;

 

  15. motion picture and musical entertainment business and promotion of sporting events;

 

  16. export and import of products, materials and software mentioned in each of the preceding items (other than item 9);

 

  17. providing repair and maintenance services for the products, goods and software mentioned in each of the preceding items for itself and on behalf of others;

 

  18. provision of information and communication services, and broadcasting business;

 

  19. provision of various services utilizing the Internet including Internet access and e-commerce;

 

  20. business related to publishing, printing, freight forwarding, security, maintenance of buildings, nursing care, dispatch of workers, general leasing, financing, non-life insurance agency and buying, selling, maintaining and leasing of real estate;

 

  21. investment in various businesses;

 

  22. accepting commission for investigations, research, development and consulting related to any of the preceding items; and

 

  23. all other business or businesses incidental or related to any of the preceding items.


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Directors

 

Each Director (excluding an outside Director) has executive powers and duties to manage the affairs of the Company and each Representative Director, who is elected from among the Directors by the Board of Directors, has the statutory authority to represent the Company in all respects. Under the Commercial Code, the Directors must refrain from engaging in any business competing with the Company unless approved by the Board of Directors and any Director who has a special interest in the subject matter of a resolution to be taken by the Board of Directors cannot vote on such resolution. The maximum total amount of remuneration to Directors and that to Corporate Auditors are subject to the approval of the general meeting of shareholders. Within such authorized amounts the amount of remuneration for each Director is determined by the Company’s Representative Director who is delegated to do so by the Board of Directors, and the amount of remuneration for each Corporate Auditor is determined upon discussions amongst the Corporate Auditors.

 

Except as stated below, neither the Commercial Code nor the Company’s Articles of Incorporation make special provisions as to the Directors’ or Corporate Auditors’ power to vote in connection with their own compensation or retirement age, the borrowing power exercisable by a Representative Director (or a Director who is given power by a Representative Director to exercise such power), or requirements to hold any shares of Common Stock of the Company. The Commercial Code requires the resolution of the Board of Directors in specific circumstances, e.g. for a company to acquire or dispose of material assets; to borrow a substantial amount of money; to appoint or dismiss important employees, such as Executive Officers; and to establish, change or abolish material corporate organizations such as a branch office. The Regulations of the Board of Directors of the Company require a resolution of the Board of Directors for the Company to borrow a large amount of money or to give a guarantee in a large amount. There is no statutory requirement as to what constitutes a “large” amount in these contexts. However, it has been the general practice of the Company’s Board of Directors to adopt a resolution for a borrowing in an amount not less than 10 billion yen or its equivalent.

 

Common Stock

 

General

 

Set forth below is information relating to the Company’s Common Stock, including brief summaries of the relevant provisions of the Company’s Articles of Incorporation and Share Handling Regulations, as currently in effect, and of the Commercial Code of Japan and related legislation.

 

In order to assert shareholders’ rights against the Company, a shareholder must have its name and address registered on the Company’s register of shareholders, in accordance with the Company’s Share Handling Regulations. The registered beneficial holder of deposited shares underlying the ADSs is the Depositary for the ADSs. Accordingly, holders of ADSs will not be able directly to assert shareholders’ rights to the Company.

 

Authorized capital

 

Article 5 of the Articles of Incorporation of the Company provides that the total number of shares authorized to be issued by the Company is four billion nine hundred and fifty million (4,950,000,000) shares.


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As of March 31, 2004, 2,453,053,497 shares of Common Stock were issued. All shares of Common Stock of the Company have no par value.

 

Dividends

 

The Articles of Incorporation of the Company provide that the accounts shall be closed on March 31 of each year and that year-end dividends, if any, shall be paid to shareholders, beneficial shareholders and pledgees of record as of the end of such day. After the close of the fiscal period, the Board of Directors prepares, among other things, a proposed allocation of profits for year-end dividends and other purposes; this proposal is submitted to the Board of Corporate Auditors of the Company and to independent certified public accountants and then submitted for approval at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders, which is normally held in June each year. In addition to provisions for year-end dividends, if any, and for the legal reserve and other reserves, the allocation of profits customarily includes a bonus to Directors and Corporate Auditors. In addition to year-end dividends, the Board of Directors may by its resolution declare a cash distribution pursuant to Article 293-5 of the Commercial Code and Article 34 of the Articles of Incorporation (an “interim dividend”) to shareholders, beneficial shareholders and pledgees of record as of the end of each September 30, without the shareholders’ approval, but subject to the limitations described below.

 

The Commercial Code provides that a company may not make any distribution of profit by way of year-end dividends or interim dividends for any fiscal period unless it has set aside in its legal reserve an amount equal to at least one-tenth of the amount paid by way of appropriation of retained earnings for such fiscal period and equal to one-tenth of the amount of such interim dividends until the aggregate amount of capital surplus and legal reserve equals to at least one-quarter of its stated capital. Under the Commercial Code, the Company is permitted to distribute profits by way of year-end or interim dividends out of the excess of its net assets, as appearing on its non-consolidated balance sheet as at the end of the preceding fiscal year, over the aggregate of:

 

  (i) its stated capital;

 

  (ii) its capital surplus;

 

  (iii) its accumulated legal reserve;

 

  (iv) the legal reserve to be set aside in respect of the fiscal period concerned; and

 

  (v) such other amounts as provided for by ordinance of the Ministry of Justice.


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In the case of interim dividends, the net assets are calculated by reference to the non-consolidated balance sheet as at the last closing of the Company’s accounts in the same manner as year-end dividends, but adjusted to reflect; (a) the legal reserve to be set aside in respect of such interim dividends; (b) any subsequent payment by way of appropriation of retained earnings; (c) any subsequent transfer of retained earnings to stated capital; (d) if the Company has been authorized, pursuant to a resolution of an ordinary general meeting of shareholders or a Board of Directors, to purchase shares of its Common Stock (see “Item 10.B. Memorandum and Articles of Association—Common StockAcquisition by the Company of its Common Stock”), the total amount of the purchase price of such shares so authorized by such resolution that may be paid by the Company; and (e) such other amounts as are set out in an ordinance of the Ministry of Justice, provided that (x) if the Company reduces its stated capital, capital surplus or accumulated legal reserve after the end of the preceding fiscal year, the amount so reduced, less the amount paid to shareholders upon such reduction and certain other amounts, and (y) such other amounts as are set out in an ordinance of the Ministry of Justice, shall be added to the amount distributable as interim dividends as described above. Interim dividends may not be paid when the net assets amount on the balance sheet at the end of the fiscal year is likely to fall below the total of the amounts referred to in (i) through (v) above.

 

In Japan the ex-dividend date and the record date for dividends precede the date of determination of the amount of the dividends to be paid.

 

Under its Articles of Incorporation, the Company is not obligated to pay any dividends which are left unclaimed for a period of three years after the date on which they first became payable.

 

For information as to Japanese taxes on shareholder dividends, see “E. Taxation—Japanese Taxation.”

 

Stock splits

 

The Company may at any time split shares in issue into a greater number of shares by resolution of the Board of Directors, and may in principle amend its Articles of Incorporation to increase the number of authorized shares to be issued in proportion to the relevant stock split pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors rather than a special resolution of a general meeting of shareholders as is otherwise required for amending the Articles of Incorporation.

 

In the event of a stock split, generally, shareholders will not be required to exchange share certificates for new share certificates, but certificates representing the additional shares resulting from the stock split will be issued to shareholders. When a stock split is to be made, the Company must give public notice of the stock split, specifying the record date therefor, at least two weeks prior to such record date. In addition, promptly after the stock split takes effect, the Company must give notice to each shareholder specifying the number of shares to which such shareholder is entitled by virtue of the stock split.

 

General meeting of shareholders

 

The ordinary general meeting of shareholders of the Company for each fiscal year is normally held in June in each year in Kadoma-shi, Osaka, Japan. In addition, the Company may hold an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders whenever necessary by giving notice of convocation thereof at least two weeks prior to the date set for the meeting.


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Notice of convocation of a shareholders’ meeting setting forth the place, time and purpose thereof, must be mailed to each shareholder having voting rights (or, in the case of a non-resident shareholder, to his or her standing proxy or mailing address in Japan) at least two weeks prior to the date set for the meeting. Under the Commercial Code, such notice may be given to shareholders by electronic means, subject to the consent of the relevant shareholders. The record date for an ordinary general meeting of shareholders is March 31 of each year.

 

Any shareholder or group of shareholders holding at least three percent of the total number of voting rights for a period of six months or more may require the convocation of a general meeting of shareholders for a particular purpose by submitting a written request to a Representative Director. Unless such shareholders’ meeting is convened promptly or a convocation notice of a meeting which is to be held not later than eight weeks from the day of such demand is dispatched, the requiring shareholder may, upon obtaining a court approval, convene such shareholders’ meeting.

 

Any shareholder or group of shareholders holding at least 300 voting rights or one percent of the total number of voting rights for a period of six months or more may propose a matter to be considered at a general meeting of shareholders by submitting a written request to a Representative Director at least eight weeks prior to the date of such meeting.

 

Voting rights

 

So long as the Company maintains the unit share system (see “Item 10.B. Memorandum and Articles of Association—Common StockUnit share system” below; currently 1,000 shares constitute one unit) a holder of shares constituting one or more full units is entitled to one voting right per unit of shares subject to the limitations on voting rights set forth in the following two sentences. A corporate shareholder, more than one-quarter of whose total voting rights are directly or indirectly owned by the Company, may not exercise its voting rights with respect to shares of Common Stock of the Company that it owns. In addition, the Company may not exercise its voting rights with respect to its shares that it owns. If the Company eliminates from its Articles of Incorporation the provisions relating to the unit of shares, holders of Common Stock will have one voting right for each share they hold. Except as otherwise provided by law or by the Articles of Incorporation, a resolution can be adopted at a general meeting of shareholders by a majority of the number of voting rights of all the shareholders represented at the meeting. The Commercial Code and the Company’s Articles of Incorporation provide, however, that the quorum for the election of Directors and Corporate Auditors shall not be less than one-third of the total number of voting rights of all the shareholders. The Company’s shareholders are not entitled to cumulative voting in the election of Directors. Shareholders may exercise their voting rights through proxies, provided that the proxies are also shareholders holding voting rights. The Company’s shareholders also may cast their votes in writing, or exercise their voting rights by electronic means pursuant to the method determined by the Board of Directors.


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The Commercial Code and the Company’s Articles of Incorporation provide that in order to amend the Articles of Incorporation and in certain other instances, including a reduction of stated capital, the removal of a Director or Corporate Auditor, a merger or dissolution with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, the transfer of the whole or an important part of the business, the taking over of the whole of the business of any other corporation with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, share exchange or share transfer for the purpose of establishing 100% parent-subsidiary relationships with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, splitting of the corporation into two or more corporations with a certain exception under which a shareholders resolution is not required, or any issue of new shares at a “specially favorable” price (or any issue of stock acquisition rights to subscribe for or acquire shares of Common Stock (“stock acquisition rights”) or bonds with stock acquisition rights at a “specially favorable” exercise conditions) to any persons other than shareholders, the quorum shall be one-third of the total voting rights of all the shareholders and the approval by at least two-thirds of the voting rights of all the shareholders represented at the meeting is required (the “special shareholders resolutions”).

 

Pursuant to the terms of the Amended and Restarted Deposit Agreement relating to American Depositing Receipts (ADRs) evidencing American Depositing Shares (ADSs), each ADS representing one share of Common Stock of the Company, as soon as practicable after receipt of notice of any meeting of shareholders of the Company, the depositary (currently JP Morgan Chase Bank) will mail to the record holders of ADRs a notice which will contain the information in the notice of the meeting. The record holders of ADRs on a date specified by the depositary will be entitled to instruct the depositary as to the exercise of the voting rights pertaining to the shares of Common Stock of the Company represented by their ADSs. The depositary will endeavor, in so far as practicable, to vote the number of shares of Common Stock of the Company represented by such ADSs in accordance with such instructions. In the absence of such instructions, the depositary has agreed to give a discretionary proxy to a person designated by the Company to vote in favor of any proposals or recommendations of the Company. However, such proxy may not be given with respect to any matter which the Company informs the depositary that the Company does not wish such proxy given, or for any proposal that has, in the discretion of the depositary, a materially adverse effect on the rights of shareholders of the Company.

 

Issue of additional shares and pre-emptive rights

 

Holders of the Company’s shares of Common Stock have no pre-emptive rights under its Articles of Incorporation. Authorized but unissued shares may be issued at such times and upon such terms as the Board of Directors determines, subject to the limitations as to the offering of new shares at a “specially favorable” price mentioned under “Voting rights” above. The Board of Directors may, however, determine that shareholders shall be given subscription rights regarding a particular issue of new shares, in which case such rights must be given on uniform terms to all shareholders as at a record date at least two weeks prior to which public notice must be given. Each of the shareholders to whom such rights are given must also be given notice of the expiry thereof at least two weeks prior to the date on which such rights expire.

 

Rights to subscribe for new shares may be made generally transferable by a resolution of the Board of Directors. Whether the Company will make subscription rights generally transferable in future rights offerings will depend upon the circumstances at the time of such offerings.


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Subject to certain conditions, the Company may issue stock acquisition rights or bonds with stock acquisition rights by a resolution of the Board of Directors. Holders of stock acquisition rights may exercise their rights to acquire a certain number of shares within the exercise period as prescribed in the terms of their stock acquisition rights. Upon the exercise of stock acquisition rights, the Company will be obliged to issue the relevant number of new shares or alternatively to transfer the necessary number of treasury stock held by it.

 

Liquidation rights

 

In the event of a liquidation of the Company, the assets remaining after payment of all debts and liquidation expenses and taxes will be distributed among shareholders in proportion to the respective numbers of shares of Common Stock held.

 

Record date

 

March 31 is the record date for the Company’s year-end dividends. So long as the Company maintains the unit share system, the shareholders and beneficial shareholders who are registered as the holders of one or more units of shares in the Company’s registers of shareholders and/or that of beneficial shareholders at the end of each March 31 are entitled to exercise shareholders’ rights at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders with respect to the fiscal year ending on such March 31. September 30 is the record date for interim dividends. In addition, the Company may set a record date for determining the shareholders and/or beneficial shareholders entitled to other rights and for other purposes by giving at least two weeks’ prior public notice.

 

The price of shares generally goes ex-dividends or ex-rights on Japanese stock exchanges on the third business day prior to a record date (or if the record date is not a business day, the fourth business day prior thereto), for the purpose of dividends or rights offerings.


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Acquisition by the Company of its Common Stock

 

The Company may acquire its own shares through a stock exchange on which such shares are listed (pursuant to an ordinary resolution of an ordinary general meeting of shareholders or a resolution of the Board of Directors), by way of tender offer (pursuant to an ordinary resolution of an ordinary general meeting of shareholders or a resolution of the Board of Directors), by purchase from a specific party other than a subsidiary of the Company (pursuant to a special resolution of an ordinary general meeting of shareholders) or from a subsidiary of the Company (pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors). If shares are purchased by the Company pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors, then the reason for the purchase, as well as the kind, number and aggregate purchase price of such shares must be reported to the shareholders at the ordinary general meeting of shareholders to be held immediately after such purchase of shares. When the proposal for such acquisition by the Company from a specific party other than a subsidiary of the Company is submitted to an ordinary general meeting of shareholders, any other shareholder may make a written request to a Representative Director, more than five calendar days prior to the relevant shareholders’ meeting, to include him/her as the seller in the proposed purchase. Any such acquisition of shares must satisfy certain requirements, including that, in the case of the acquisition by the Company of its own shares pursuant to an ordinary resolution of an ordinary general meeting of shareholders, the total amount of the purchase price may not exceed the amount of the retained earnings available for dividend payments after taking into account a reduction, if any, of the stated capital, capital surplus or legal reserve (if such reduction of the stated capital, capital surplus or legal reserve has been authorized pursuant to a resolution of the relevant ordinary general meeting of shareholders), minus the amount to be paid by way of appropriation of retained earnings for the relevant fiscal year and the amount to be transferred from retained earnings to stated capital. If the Company purchases shares pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors, the total amount of the purchase price may not exceed the amount of the retained earnings available for interim dividend payments minus the amount of any interim dividend the Company actually paid. However, if it is anticipated that the net assets on the non-consolidated balance sheet as at the end of the relevant fiscal year will be less than the aggregate amount of the stated capital, capital surplus and other items as described in (i) through (v) to “Dividends” above, the Company may not acquire such shares.

 

Shares acquired by the Company may be held by it for any period or may be cancelled by a resolution of the Board of Directors. The Company may also transfer to any person the shares held by it, subject to a resolution of the Board of Directors and to other requirements similar to those applicable to the issuance of new shares, as described in “Issue of additional shares and pre-emptive rights” above. The Company may also utilize its treasury stock for the purpose of transfer to any person upon exercise of stock acquisition rights or for the purpose of acquiring another company by way of merger, share exchange or corporate split through exchange of treasury stock for shares or assets of the acquired company.

 

Unit share system

 

The Articles of Incorporation of the Company provide that 1,000 shares constitute one unit of shares of Common Stock. Although the number of shares constituting one unit is included in the Articles of Incorporation, any amendment to the Articles of Incorporation reducing (but not increasing) the number of shares constituting one unit or eliminating the provisions for the unit of shares may be made by a resolution of the Board of Directors rather than by a special shareholders resolution, which is otherwise required for amending the Articles of Incorporation. The number of shares constituting one unit, however, cannot exceed 1,000 or one two-hundredth (1/200) of all issued shares.


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Under the unit share system, shareholders shall have one voting right for each unit of shares that they hold. Any number of shares less than a full unit will carry no voting rights.

 

Unless the Company’s Board of Directors adopts a resolution to eliminate the provision for the unit shares from the Articles of Incorporation or the shareholders amend the Articles of Incorporation by a special shareholders resolution to eliminate the provision not to issue share certificates for less than a unit of shares, a share certificate for any number of shares less than one full unit will in general not be issued. As the transfer of shares normally requires the delivery of the share certificates therefor, any fraction of a unit for which no share certificates are issued is not transferable.

 

A holder of shares constituting less than one unit may require the Company to purchase such shares at their market value in accordance with the provisions of the Share Handling Regulations of the Company. In addition, the Articles of Incorporation of the Company provide that a holder of shares constituting less than one full unit may request the Company to sell to such holder such amount of shares which will, when added together with the shares constituting less than one full unit held by such holder, constitute one full unit of stock, in accordance with the provisions of the Share Handling Regulations of the Company.

 

A holder who owns ADRs evidencing less than 1,000 ADSs will indirectly own less than one full unit of shares of Common Stock. Although, as discussed above, under the unit share system holders of less than one full unit have the right to require the Company to purchase their shares or sell shares held by the Company to such holders, holders of ADRs evidencing ADSs that represent other than integral multiples of full units are unable to withdraw the underlying shares of Common Stock representing less than one full unit and, therefore, are unable, as a practical matter, to exercise the rights to require the Company to purchase such underlying shares or sell shares held by the Company to such holders unless the Company’s Articles of Incorporation are amended to eliminate the provision not to issue share certificates for the numbers of shares less than a unit. As a result, access to the Japanese markets by holders of ADRs through the withdrawal mechanism will not be available for dispositions of shares of Common Stock in lots less than one full unit. The unit share system does not affect the transferability of ADSs, which may be transferred in lots of any size.

 

Sale by the Company of shares held by shareholders whose location is unknown

 

The Company is not required to send a notice to a shareholder if a notice to such shareholder fails to arrive at the registered address of the shareholder in the Company’s register of shareholders or at the address otherwise notified to the Company continuously for five years or more.

 

In addition, the Company may sell or otherwise dispose of shares of Common Stock for which the location of the shareholder is unknown. Generally, if (i) notices to a shareholder fail to arrive continuously for five years or more at the shareholder’s registered address in the Company’s register of shareholders or at the address otherwise notified to the Company, and (ii) the shareholder fails to receive dividends on the shares continuously for five years or more at the address registered in the Company’s register of shareholders or at the address otherwise notified to the Company, the Company may sell or otherwise dispose of the shareholder’s shares by a resolution of the Board of Directors and after giving at least three months’ prior public and individual notice, and hold or deposit the proceeds of such sale or disposal of shares at the then market price of the shares for the shareholder, the location of which is unknown.


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Reporting of substantial shareholdings

 

The Securities and Exchange Law of Japan and regulations thereunder requires any person, regardless of his/her residence, who has become, beneficially and solely or jointly, a holder of more than five percent of the total issued shares of Common Stock of a company listed on any Japanese stock exchange or whose shares are traded on the over-the-counter market in Japan, to file with the Director-General of a competent Local Finance Bureau of Ministry of Finance within five business days a report concerning such shareholdings.

 

A similar report must also be filed in respect to any subsequent change of one percent or more in any such holding or any change in material matters set out in reports previously filed, with certain exceptions. For this purpose, shares issuable to such person upon conversion of convertible securities or exercise of share subscription warrants or stock acquisition rights are taken into account in determining both the number of shares held by such holder and the issuer’s total issued share capital. Copies of such report must also be furnished to the issuer of such shares and all Japanese stock exchanges on which the shares are listed or (in the case of shares traded over-the-counter) the Japan Securities Dealers Association.

 

Except for the general limitation under Japanese anti-trust and anti-monopoly regulations against holding of shares of Common Stock of a Japanese corporation which leads or may lead to a restraint of trade or a monopoly, and except for general limitations under the Commercial Code or the Company’s Articles of Incorporation on the rights of shareholders applicable regardless of residence or nationality, there is practically no limitation under Japanese laws and regulations applicable to the Company or under its Articles of Incorporation on the rights of non-resident or foreign shareholders to hold the shares of Common Stock of the Company or exercise voting rights thereon.

 

There is no provision in the Company’s Articles of Incorporation that would have an effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control of the Company and that would operate only with respect to merger, consolidation, acquisition or corporate restructuring involving the Company.

 

Daily price fluctuation limits under Japanese stock exchange rules

 

Stock prices on Japanese stock exchanges are determined on a real-time basis by the balance between bids and offers. These stock exchanges are order-driven markets without specialists or market makers to guide price formation. In order to prevent excessive volatility, these stock exchanges set daily upward and downward price range limitations for each listed stock, based on the previous day’s closing price. Although transactions may continue at the upward or downward limit price if the limit price is reached on a particular trading day, no transactions may take place outside these limits. Consequently, an investor wishing to sell at a price above or below the relevant daily limit on these stock exchanges may not be able to effect a sale at such price on a particular trading day, or at all.

 

 

C. Material Contracts

 

All contracts concluded by the Company during the two years preceding the date of this report were entered into in the ordinary course of business.


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D. Exchange Controls

 

The Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Law of Japan and its related cabinet orders and ministerial ordinances (the “Foreign Exchange Regulations”) govern the acquisition and holding of shares of Common Stock of the Company by “exchange non-residents” and by “foreign investors.” The Foreign Exchange Regulations currently in effect do not, however, affect transactions between exchange non-residents to purchase or sell shares outside Japan using currencies other than Japanese yen, except in limited circumstances.

 

Exchange non-residents are:

 

  (i) individuals who do not reside in Japan; and

 

  (ii) corporations whose principal offices are located outside Japan.

 

Generally, branches and other offices of non-resident corporations that are located within Japan are regarded as residents of Japan. Conversely, branches and other offices of Japanese corporations located outside Japan are regarded as exchange non-residents.

 

Foreign investors are:

 

  (i) individuals who are exchange non-residents;

 

  (ii) corporations that are organized under the laws of foreign countries or whose principal offices are located outside of Japan; and

 

  (iii) corporations (1) of which 50% or more of their shares are held by individuals who are exchange non-residents and/or corporations (a) that are organized under the laws of foreign countries or (b) whose principal offices are located outside of Japan or (2) a majority of whose officers, or officers having the power of representation, are individuals who are exchange non-residents.

 

In general, the acquisition of shares of a Japanese company (such as the shares of Common Stock of the Company) by an exchange non-resident from a resident of Japan is not subject to any prior filing requirements. In certain limited circumstances, however, the Minister of Finance may require prior approval of an acquisition of this type. While prior approval, as described above, is not required, in the case where a resident of Japan transfers shares of a Japanese company (such as the shares of Common Stock of the Company) for consideration exceeding 100 million yen to an exchange non-resident, the resident of Japan who transfers the shares is required to report the transfer to the Minister of Finance within 20 days from the date of the transfer, unless the transfer was made through a bank, securities company or financial futures trader licensed under Japanese law.

 

If a foreign investor acquires shares of a Japanese company that is listed on a Japanese stock exchange (such as the shares of Common Stock of the Company) or that is traded on an over-the-counter market in Japan and, as a result of the acquisition, the foreign investor, in combination with any existing holdings, directly or indirectly holds 10% or more of the issued shares of the relevant company, the foreign investor must file a report of the acquisition with the Minister of Finance and any other competent Ministers having jurisdiction over that Japanese company within 15 days from and including the date of the acquisition, except where the offering of the company’s shares was made overseas. In limited circumstances, such as where the foreign investor is in a country that is not listed on an exemption schedule in the Foreign Exchange Regulations, a prior notification of the acquisition must be filed with the Minister of Finance and any other competent Ministers, who may then modify or prohibit the proposed acquisition.


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Under the Foreign Exchange Regulations, dividends paid on and the proceeds from the sale in Japan of shares of Common Stock of the Company held by non-residents of Japan may generally be converted into any foreign currency and repatriated abroad.

 

E. Taxation

 

The discussion below is not intended to constitute a complete analysis of all tax consequences relating to the ownership and disposition of shares of Common Stock and ADSs. Prospective purchasers and holders of the shares of Common Stock or ADSs should consult their own tax advisors concerning the tax consequences of their particular situations.

 

The following is a summary of the principal Japanese national and U.S. federal tax consequences of the ownership and disposition of shares of Common Stock or ADSs by an Eligible U.S. Holder and a U.S. Holder (each as defined below), as the case may be, that holds those shares or ADSs as capital assets (generally, property held for investment). This summary does not purport to address all material tax consequences that may be relevant to holders of shares of Common Stock or ADSs, and does not take into account the specific circumstances of any particular investors, some of which (such as tax-exempt entities, banks, insurance companies, broker-dealers, traders in securities that elect to use a mark-to-market method of accounting for their securities holdings, regulated investment companies, real estate investment trusts, investors liable for alternative minimum tax, investors that own or are treated as owning 10% or more of the Company’s voting stock, investors that hold shares of Common Stock or ADSs as part of a straddle, hedge, conversion or constructive sale transaction or other integrated transaction, persons that hold shares of Common Stock or ADSs through a partnership or other pass-through entity and Eligible U.S. Holders and U.S. Holders, as the case may be, whose functional currency is not the U.S. dollar) may be subject to special tax rules. This summary is based on the national or federal tax laws of Japan and of the United States as in effect on the date hereof, as well as on the current income tax convention between the United States and Japan, all of which are subject to change (possibly with retroactive effect) and to differing interpretations.

 

U.S. Holders should note that the United States and Japan have ratified the new income tax convention (the “New Treaty”), which is to replace its predecessor income tax convention signed on March 8, 1971 (the “Prior Treaty”). The New Treaty entered into force on March 30, 2004 and shall be applicable in Japan, in place of the Prior Treaty, (i) with respect to taxes withheld at source, for amounts taxable on or after July 1, 2004, and (ii) with respect to taxes on income which are not withheld at source and the enterprise taxes, as regards income for any taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2005 (subject to certain transitional rules with respect to both items (i) and (ii) above). The Prior Treaty shall cease to have effect in relation to any tax from the date on which the New Treaty shall be applicable (subject to certain transitional rules allowing for exceptions). Where relevant, U.S. Holders are urged to confirm whether they are entitled to the treaty benefit provided under the Prior Treaty or the New Treaty, as the case may be, with their tax advisors.

 

In addition, this summary is based in part upon the representations of the Depositary and the assumption that each obligation in the Deposit Agreement for ADSs and in any related agreement will be performed in accordance with its terms.


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For purposes of this discussion, a “U.S. Holder” is any beneficial owner of shares of Common Stock or ADSs that, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, is:

 

  (i) a citizen or individual resident of the United States,

 

  (ii) a corporation or other entity taxable as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes organized in or under the laws of the United States, any State, or the District of Columbia,

 

  (iii) an estate the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income tax without regard to its source, or

 

  (iv) a trust that is subject to the primary supervision of a U.S. court and the control of one or more U.S. persons, or that has a valid election in effect under applicable Treasury regulations to be treated as a U.S. person.

 

An “Eligible U.S. Holder” is a U.S. Holder that:

 

  (i) is a resident of the United States for purposes of the Prior Treaty or the New Treaty, as applicable from time to time,

 

  (ii) does not maintain a permanent establishment or fixed base in Japan to which shares of Common Stock or ADSs are attributable and through which the U.S. Holder carries on or has carried on business (or, in the case of an individual, performs or has performed independent personal services), and

 

  (iii) is otherwise eligible for benefits under the Prior Treaty or the New Treaty, as applicable, with respect to income and gain derived in connection with the shares of Common Stock or ADSs.

 

This summary does not address any aspects of U.S. federal tax law other than income taxation, and does not discuss any aspects of Japanese tax law other than national income taxation, inheritance and gift taxation. Investors are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the U.S. federal, state and local and Japanese and other tax consequences of owning and disposing of shares of Common Stock or ADSs. In particular, where relevant, investors are urged to confirm their status as Eligible U.S. Holders with their tax advisors and to discuss with their tax advisors any possible consequences of their failure to qualify as Eligible U.S. Holders. In general, taking into account the earlier assumption, for purposes of the Prior Treaty and the New Treaty, as applicable, and for U.S. federal income and Japanese tax purposes, beneficial owners of ADRs evidencing ADSs will be treated as the owners of the shares of Common Stock represented by those ADSs, and exchanges of shares of Common Stock for ADSs, and exchanges of ADSs for shares of Common Stock, will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax or Japanese income tax.

 

Japanese taxation

 

The following is a summary of the principal Japanese tax consequences (limited to national taxes) to holders of shares of Common Stock of the Company or ADRs evidencing ADSs representing shares of Common Stock of the Company who are either individuals who are not residents of Japan or non-Japanese corporations, without a permanent establishment in Japan (“non-resident Holders”).

 

Generally, an individual who is a non-resident of Japan or a non-Japanese corporation is subject to Japanese withholding tax on dividends paid by a Japanese corporation. The Company withholds taxes from dividends it pays as required by Japanese law. Stock splits in themselves are not subject to Japanese income tax.


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In the absence of an applicable treaty, convention or agreement reducing the maximum rate of Japanese withholding tax or allowing exemption from Japanese withholding tax, the rate of Japanese withholding tax applicable to dividends paid by Japanese corporations to individuals who are non-residents of Japan or non-Japanese corporations is 20%. However, with respect to dividends paid on listed shares issued by a Japanese corporation (such as the shares of Common Stock of the Company) to any corporate or individual shareholders (including those shareholders who are non-Japanese corporations or Japanese non-resident individuals, such as non-resident Holders), except for any individual shareholder who holds 5% or more of the total issued shares of the relevant Japanese corporation, the aforementioned 20% withholding tax rate is reduced to (i) 7% for dividends due and payable on or before March 31, 2008, and (ii) 15% for dividends due and payable on or after April 1, 2008. At the date of this annual report, Japan has income tax treaties, conventions or agreements whereby the above-mentioned withholding tax rate is reduced, in most cases to 15% for portfolio investors with, among other countries, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.K.

 

Under the Prior Treaty, the maximum rate of Japanese withholding tax which may be imposed on dividends paid by a Japanese corporation to an Eligible U.S. Holder that is a portfolio investor was limited to 15% of the gross amount actually distributed. However, under the New Treaty which would become applicable to dividends declared by the Company on or after July 1, 2004, the maximum rate of Japanese withholding tax which may be imposed on dividends paid by a Japanese corporation to an Eligible U.S. Holder that is a portfolio investor is generally limited to 10% of the gross amount actually distributed, and dividends paid by a Japanese corporation to an Eligible U.S. Holder that is a pension fund is exempt from Japanese taxation by way of withholding or otherwise unless such dividends are derived from the carrying on of a business, directly or indirectly, by such pension fund.


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If the maximum tax rate provided for in the income tax treaty applicable to dividends paid by the Company to any particular non-resident Holder is lower than the withholding tax rate otherwise applicable under Japanese tax law or any particular non-resident Holder is exempt from Japanese income tax with respect to such dividends under the income tax treaty applicable to such particular non-resident Holder, such non-resident Holder who is entitled to a reduced rate of or exemption from Japanese withholding tax on payment of dividends on the Company’s shares of Common Stock is required to submit an Application Form for Income Tax Convention Regarding Relief from Japanese Income Tax on Dividends in advance through the Company to the relevant tax authority before such payment of dividends. A standing proxy for non-resident Holders of a Japanese corporation may provide this application service. With respect to ADSs, this reduced rate or exemption is applicable if the Depositary or its agent submits two Application Forms (one before payment of dividends, the other within eight months after the Company’s fiscal year-end) to the Japanese tax authorities. To claim this reduced rate or exemption, any relevant non-resident Holder of ADSs will be required to file a proof of taxpayer status, residence and beneficial ownership (as applicable) and to provide other information or documents as may be required by the Depositary. A non-resident Holder who is entitled, under an applicable income tax treaty, to a reduced treaty rate lower than the withholding tax rate otherwise applicable under Japanese tax law or an exemption from the withholding tax, but failed to submit the required application in advance will be entitled to claim the refund of withholding taxes withheld in excess of the rate under an applicable tax treaty (if such non-resident Holder is entitled to a reduced treaty rate under the applicable income tax treaty) or the whole of the withholding tax withheld (if such non-resident Holder is entitled to an exemption under the applicable income tax treaty) from the relevant Japanese tax authority. The Company does not assume any responsibility to ensure withholding at the reduced treaty rate or not withholding for shareholders who would be eligible under an applicable tax treaty but do not follow the required procedures as stated above.

 

Gains derived from the sale of shares of Common Stock or ADSs outside Japan by a non-resident Holder holding such shares or ADSs as a portfolio investor are, in general, not subject to Japanese income or corporation tax. Eligible U.S. Holders are not subject to Japanese income or corporation tax with respect to such gains under the Prior Treaty and the New Treaty, as applicable.

 

Japanese inheritance and gift taxes at progressive rates may be payable by an individual who has acquired shares of Common Stock or ADSs as a legatee, heir or donee even though neither the individual nor the deceased nor donor is a Japanese resident.

 

Holders of shares of Common Stock of the Company or ADSs should consult their tax advisors regarding the effect of these taxes and, in the case of U.S. Holders, the possible application of the Estate and Gift Tax Treaty between the U.S. and Japan.

 

U.S. federal income taxation

 

The following is a summary of certain United States federal income tax consequences of the ownership of shares of Common Stock or ADSs by a U.S. Holder. This summary is based on United States tax laws, including the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and on the New Treaty all of which are subject to change possibly with retroactive effect.


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Taxation of dividends

 

Under the United States federal income tax laws, and subject to the passive foreign investment company (PFIC) rules discussed below, the gross amount of any dividends received by a U.S. Holder (before reduction for Japanese withholding taxes) to the extent paid out of the Company’s current or accumulated earnings and profits (as determined for United States federal income tax purposes) will be subject to U.S. federal taxation. Dividends paid to non-corporate U.S. Holders in taxable years beginning after December 31, 2002 and before January 1, 2009 that constitute qualified dividend income will be taxable at a maximum tax rate of 15% provided that the U.S. Holders held the shares of Common Stock or ADSs for more than 60 days during the 120-day period beginning 60 days before the ex-dividend date and meet other holding period requirements. The IRS has announced that it will permit taxpayers to apply a proposed legislative change to the holding period requirement described in the preceding sentence as if such change were already effective. This legislative “technical correction” would change the minimum required holding period, retroactive to January 1, 2003, to more than 60 days during the 121-day period beginning 60 days before the ex-dividend date. Dividends the Company pays with respect to the shares of Common Stock or ADSs generally will be qualified dividend income. The U.S. Holder must include any Japanese tax withheld from the dividend payment in this gross amount even though it does not in fact receive it. The dividend is taxable to the U.S. Holder when the U.S. Holder, in the case of shares of Common Stock, or the Depositary, in the case of ADSs, receives the dividend, actually or constructively. The dividend will not be eligible for the dividends-received deduction allowed to United States corporations in respect of dividends received from other United States corporations. The amount of the dividend will be the U.S. dollar value of the Japanese yen payments made, determined at the spot Japanese yen/U.S. dollar rate on the date the dividend is includible in the U.S. Holder’s income, regardless of whether the payment is in fact converted into U.S. dollars. Generally, any gain or loss resulting from currency exchange fluctuations during the period from the date the U.S. Holder includes the dividend payment in income to the date the U.S. Holder converts the payment into U.S. dollars will be treated as ordinary income or loss and will not be eligible for the special tax rate applicable to qualified dividend income. The gain or loss generally will be income or loss from sources within the United States for foreign tax credit limitation purposes. Distributions in excess of current and accumulated earnings and profits, as determined for United States federal income tax purposes, will be treated as a non-taxable return of capital to the extent of the U.S. Holder’s basis in the shares of Common Stock or ADSs and thereafter as capital gain.

 

Subject to certain limitations, the Japanese tax withheld in accordance with the Treaty will be creditable against the U.S. Holder’s United States federal income tax liability. Special rules apply in determining the foreign tax credit limitation with respect to dividends that are subject to the maximum 15% tax rate. For foreign tax credit limitation purposes, the dividend will be income from sources outside the United States, but generally will be treated separately, together with other items of “passive income” or “financial services income.”


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Taxation of capital gains

 

Subject to the PFIC rules discussed below, upon a sale or other disposition of shares of Common Stock or ADSs, a U.S. Holder will recognize gain or loss in an amount equal to the difference between the U.S. dollar value of the amount realized and the U.S. Holder’s tax basis (determined in U.S. dollars) in such shares of Common Stock or ADSs. Generally, such gain or loss will be capital gain or loss and will be long-term capital gain or loss if the U.S. Holder’s holding period for such shares of Common Stock or ADSs is greater than 1 year. Long-term capital gain of a non-corporate U.S. Holder that is recognized on or after May 6, 2003 and before January 1, 2009 is generally taxed at a maximum rate of 15%. Any such gain or loss will be income or loss from sources within the United States for foreign tax credit limitation purposes.

 

Transfers of retained earnings and sales of shares of Common Stock to the Company

 

A transfer of retained earnings or legal reserve to stated capital is generally treated as a dividend payment for Japanese tax purposes subject to withholding tax. A sale of shares of Common Stock or ADSs to the Company results in a deemed dividend to the selling shareholders to the extent that the sales price exceeds the aggregate of the stated capital and the capital surplus attributable to the shares sold. Transfers of retained earnings or legal reserves to stated capital and deemed dividends that may result from sales of shares of Common Stock to the Company are not generally taxable events that give rise to foreign source income for U.S. federal income tax purposes and U.S. Holders would not be able to use the foreign tax credit arising from any Japanese withholding tax imposed on such transactions unless they can apply the credit (subject to limitations) against U.S. tax due or other foreign source income in the appropriate category for foreign tax credit purposes.

 

Passive foreign investment company considerations

 

The Company believes that shares of Common Stock and ADSs should not be treated as stock of a PFIC for United States federal income tax purposes, but this conclusion is a factual determination made annually and thus may be subject to change. If the Company were to be treated as a PFIC (unless a U.S. Holder elects to be taxed annually on a mark-to-market basis with respect to the shares of Common Stock or ADSs), gain realized on the sale or other disposition of shares of Common Stock or ADSs would in general not be treated as capital gain, and a U.S. Holder would be treated as if such holder had realized such gain and certain “excess distributions” ratably over the holder’s holding period for the shares of Common Stock or ADSs and would be taxed at the highest tax rate in effect for each such year to which the gain was allocated, together with an interest charge in respect of the tax attributable to each such year. In addition, notwithstanding any election a U.S. Holder makes with regard to the shares of Common Stock or ADSs, dividends that a U.S. Holder receives from the Company will not constitute qualified dividend income if the Company is a PFIC either in the taxable year of the distribution or the preceding taxable year. Dividends that a U.S. Holder receives that do not constitute qualified dividend income are not eligible for taxation at the 15% maximum rate applicable to qualified dividend income. Instead, the U.S. Holder must include the gross amount of any such dividend paid by the Company out of its accumulated earnings and profits (as determined for United States federal income tax purposes) in the U.S. Holder’s gross income, and it will be subject to tax at rates applicable to ordinary income.

 

 

F. Dividends and Paying Agents

 

Not applicable


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G. Statement by Experts

 

Not applicable

 

 

H. Documents on Display

 

According to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, Matsushita is subject to the requirements of informational disclosure. Matsushita files various reports and other information, including its annual report on Form 20-F, with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. These reports and other information may be inspected at the public reference room at the Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 20549. You can also obtain a copy of such material by mail from the public reference room of the Securities and Exchange Commission at prescribed fees. You may obtain information on the operation of the Securities and Exchange Commission public reference room by calling the Securities and Exchange Commission in the United States at 1-800-SEC-0330.

 

Also, documents filed via the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system (EDGAR) are available at the website of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (http://www.sec.gov).

 

 

I. Subsidiary Information

 

Not applicable

 

 

Item 11. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

 

The Company is exposed to market risk, including changes of foreign exchange rates, interest rates and prices of marketable securities and commodities. In order to hedge the risks of changes in foreign exchange rates, interest rates and commodity prices, the Company uses derivative financial instruments. The Company does not hold or issue financial instruments for trading purposes. Although the use of derivative financial instruments exposes the Company to the risk of credit-related losses in the event of nonperformance by counterparties, the Company believes that such risk is minor because of the high credit rating of the counterparties.

 

Equity Price Risk

 

The Company holds available-for-sale securities included in short-term investments and investments and advances. In general, highly-liquid and low risk instruments are preferred in the portfolio. Available-for-sale securities included in investments and advances are held as longer term investments. The Company does not hold marketable securities for trading purposes.


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Maturities, costs and fair values of available-for-sale securities were as follows at March 31, 2004 and 2003:

 

     Yen (millions)

     2004

   2003

     Cost

   Fair
value


   Cost

   Fair
value


Due within one year

   2,683    2,684    1,196    1,196

Due after one year through five years

   18,325    18,300    34,514    33,584

Equity securities

   217,470    398,425    242,946    254,032
    
  
  
  
     238,478    419,409    278,656    288,812
    
  
  
  

 

Foreign Exchange Risk

 

The primary purpose of the Company’s foreign currency hedging activities is to protect against the volatility associated with foreign currency transactions. The Company primarily utilizes forward exchange contracts and options with a duration of less than a few months. The Company also enters into foreign exchange contracts from time to time to hedge the risk of fluctuation in foreign currency exchange rates associated with long-term debt that is denominated in foreign currencies. Foreign exchange contracts related to such long-term debt have the same maturity as the underlying debt.

 

The following table provides the contract amounts and fair values of foreign exchange contracts, primarily hedging U.S. dollar revenues, at March 31, 2004 and 2003. Amounts related to foreign exchange contracts entered into in connection with long-term debt denominated in foreign currencies which eliminate all foreign currency exposures, are shown in the table of “Interest Rate Risk.”

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

 
     Contract
amount


   Fair
value


    Contract
amount


   Fair
value


 

Forward:

                      

To sell foreign currencies

   398,782    9,446     387,605    (1,383 )

To buy foreign currencies

   205,039    (469 )   214,075    1,664  

Options purchased to sell foreign currencies

   44,886    746     50,883    127  

Options written to sell foreign currencies

   29,046    (455 )   —      —    

Cross currency swaps

   14,914    227     8,420    (26 )

 

Commodity Price Risk

 

The Company is exposed to market risk of changes in prices of commodities including various non-ferrous metals used in the manufacturing of electronic components and devices. The Company enters into commodity future contracts to offset such exposure.


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The following table provides the contract amounts and fair values of commodity futures, at March 31, 2004 and 2003.

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

 
     Contract
amount


   Fair
value


    Contract
amount


   Fair
value


 

Commodity futures:

                      

To sell commodity

   14,915    (1,223 )   13,341    672  

To buy commodity

   52,888    5,709     43,214    (1,940 )

 

Interest Rate Risk

 

The Company’s exposure to market risk for changes in interest rates relates principally to its debt obligations. The Company has long-term debt primarily with fixed rates. Fixed-rate debt obligations expose the Company to variability in their fair values due to changes in interest rates. To manage the variability in the fair values caused by interest rate changes, the Company enters into interest rate swaps when it is determined to be appropriate based on market conditions. Interest rate swaps change fixed-rate debt obligations to variable-rate debt obligations by entering into fixed-receiving, variable -paying interest rate swap contracts. The hedging relationship between interest rate swaps and hedged debt obligations is highly effective in achieving offsetting changes in fair values resulting from interest rate risk. The following tables provide information about the Company’s derivative financial instruments and other financial instruments that are sensitive to changes in interest rates at March 31, 2004 and 2003. For debt obligations, the table presents principal cash flows by expected maturity dates, related weighted average interest rates and fair values of financial instruments. For interest rate swaps, the table presents notional principal amounts and weighted average interest rates by expected maturity dates. Notional principal amounts are used to calculate the contractual payments to be exchanged under the contracts.

 

Long-term debt, including current portion:

 

     Average
interest
rate


  Yen (millions)

     Carrying amount and maturity date (as of March 31, 2004)

   Fair
value


     Total

   2005

   2006

   2007

   2008

   2009

   There-
after


  

Japanese yen convertible bonds

   0.9%   27,496    10,968    16,528                        28,272

Straight bonds

   1.0%   300,135    100,086         100,049              100,000    306,210

Straight bonds issued by subsidiaries

   1.8%   46,364         16,364    20,000    10,000              47,633

Unsecured yen loans from banks and insurance companies

   0.5%   293,732    101,623    85,928    59,998    30,616    15,083    484    292,112
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

Total

       667,727    212,677    118,820    180,047    40,616    15,083    100,484    674,227
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
  


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         Yen (millions)

         Carrying amount and maturity date (as of March 31, 2003)

   Fair
value


     Average
interest
rate


  Total

   2004

   2005

   2006

   2007

   2008

   There-
after


  

Japanese yen convertible bonds

   1.3%   126,225    97,742    11,483    17,000                   128,334

Straight bonds

   1.0%   300,272         100,120         100,152         100,000    308,407

Straight bonds issued by subsidiaries

   1.8%   52,206    5,000         17,206    20,000    10,000         54,192

Unsecured yen loans from banks and insurance companies

   0.5%   322,630    115,680    86,259    80,331    31,107    8,850    403    321,975
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

Total

       801,333    218,422    197,862    114,537    151,259    18,850    100,403    812,908
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

 

Interest rate swaps:

 

                  Yen (millions)

                 

Notional amount and maturity

date (as of March 31, 2004)


   Fair
value


Average
receive
rate


      

Average pay rate


       2005

   2006

   2007

  

2008


  

    2009    


     There-  
after


  

0.42%

       JPY6M LIBOR + 0.21%        100,000                                      86

0.87%

       JPY6M LIBOR + 0.40%                    15,000                   49
                 

Notional amount and maturity date

(as of March 31, 2003)


   Fair
value


Average
receive
rate


      

Average pay rate


       2004

   2005

   2006

   2007

   2008

   There-
after


  

0.42%

       JPY6M LIBOR + 0.21%             100,000                        120

0.87%

       JPY6M LIBOR + 0.40%                         15,000              152

 

Item 12. Description of Securities Other than Equity Securities

 

Not applicable


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PART II

 

Item 13. Defaults, Dividend Arrearages and Delinquencies

 

None

 

 

Item 14. Material Modifications to the Rights of Security Holders and Use of Proceeds

 

None

 

 

Item 15. Controls and Procedures

 

The Company’s management, with the participation of its principal executive and principal financial officers, evaluated the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15 (e) under the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934) as of March 31, 2004. Based on that evaluation, the Company’s principal executive and principal financial officers concluded that the disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of that date.

 

No change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rules 13a-15 (f) under the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934) occurred during the year ended March 31, 2004 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

 

Item 16A. Audit Committee Financial Expert

 

Matsushita’s Board of Corporate Auditors has determined that Kazumi Kawaguchi, a Senior Corporate Auditor of Matsushita, is an “audit committee financial expert” as such term is defined by Item 16A of Form 20-F.

 

 

Item 16B. Code of Ethics

 

Matsushita has adopted a Code of Ethics applicable to the Chief Executive Officer, the Chief Financial Officer and other Executive Officers. The Code of Ethics is attached as an exhibit to this annual report on Form 20-F.


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Item 16C. Principal Accountant Fees and Services

 

Fees and services by the Company’s principal accountant

 

The following table shows the aggregate fees accrued or paid to KPMG AZSA & Co. and its member firms (KPMG), the Company’s principal accountant for the years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003:

 

     Yen (millions)

     2004

   2003

Audit fees

   1,195    1,146

Audit-related fees

   242    187

Tax fees

   465    603

All other fees

   15    6
    
  

Total

   1,917    1,942
    
  

 

Audit fees are fees for professional services for the audit of the Company’s annual financial statements or services that are normally provided by the accountant in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements. Audit-related fees are fees for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the Company’s financial statements and are not reported under the Audit fees category, such as assistance in due diligence and issuance of certificated documents. Tax fees are fees for professional services rendered mainly for tax compliance, tax advice, tax consulting associated with international transfer prices and expatriate employee tax services. All other fees are fees for those services not reported under the Audit fees, Audit-related fees, and Tax fees categories, such as professional advices related to environmental regulations.

 

No services were provided for which pre-approval was waived pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

 

Policy of the Company’s Board of Corporate Auditors on pre-approval of audit or non-audit services

 

In accordance with paragraph (c)(7)(i) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X and the related adopting release of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Company’s Board of Corporate Auditors must pre-approve the engagement of the Company’s principal accountant, currently KPMG, by Matsushita or its subsidiaries to render audit or non-audit services. Also, paragraph (c)(4) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X provides that an accountant is not independent from an audit client if the accountant provides certain non-audit services to the audit client. Under the policy adopted by the Company’s Board of Corporate Auditors, all audit or non-audit services provided by KPMG must be specifically pre-approved by the Board of Corporate Auditors. Such pre-approval is considered at the monthly meetings of the Board of Corporate Auditors. Any service that either falls into a category of services that are not permitted by the applicable law or regulation or is otherwise deemed by the Board of Corporate Auditors to be inconsistent with the maintenance of the principal accountant’s independence is rejected. Management’s requests for proposed engagement of the principal accountant to render services that require immediate approval, if considered necessary, are pre-approved by a designated member of the Board of Corporate Auditors, and then reported to the Board of Corporate Auditors at its next meeting.


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Item 16D. Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit Committees

 

Not applicable

 

 

Item 16E. Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers

 

Not applicable


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PART III

 

Item 17. Financial Statements

 

Not applicable

 

Item 18. Financial Statements

 

Index of Consolidated Financial Statements of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. and Subsidiaries:

 

     Page

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

   98

Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 2004 and 2003

   99

Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

   101

Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

   102

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

   104

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

   106

 

Schedule for the years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002:

 

Schedule II     Valuation and Qualifying Accounts and Reserves for the years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

   152

 

All other schedules are omitted as permitted by the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission as the required information is presented in the consolidated financial statements or notes thereto, or the schedules are not applicable.


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Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

The Board of Directors and Stockholders

Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.:

 

We have audited the consolidated financial statements of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. and subsidiaries as listed in the accompanying index. In connection with our audits of the consolidated financial statements, we also have audited the financial statement schedule as listed in the accompanying index. 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 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. and subsidiaries as of March 31, 2004 and 2003, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended March 31, 2004, 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 described in Notes 1(i) and 8 of the notes to the consolidated financial statements, effective April 1, 2002, the Company changed its method of accounting for goodwill and other intangible assets as a result of the adoption of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 142, “Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets.”

 

 

KPMG AZSA & Co.

 

 

Osaka, Japan

April 28, 2004


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Balance Sheets

 

March 31, 2004 and 2003

 

     Yen (millions)

 

Assets


   2004

    2003

 

Current assets:

            

Cash and cash equivalents (Note 9)

   1,275,014     1,167,470  

Time deposits (Note 9)

   170,047     395,559  

Short-term investments (Notes 5 and 17)

   2,684     1,196  

Trade receivables (Notes 6 and 9):

            

Related companies (Note 4)

   15,071     18,389  

Notes

   62,762     67,351  

Accounts

   1,037,707     1,114,208  

Allowance for doubtful receivables

   (47,873 )   (53,043 )
    

 

Net trade receivables

   1,067,667     1,146,905  
    

 

Inventories (Notes 3 and 9)

   777,540     783,262  

Other current assets (Notes 11 and 17)

   482,025     491,786  
    

 

Total current assets

   3,774,977     3,986,178  
    

 

Noncurrent receivables (Note 6)

   280,398     299,239  

Investments and advances (Notes 5 and 17):

            

Associated companies (Note 4)

   372,732     427,189  

Other investments and advances

   864,695     592,948  
    

 

Total investments and advances

   1,237,427     1,020,137  
    

 

Property, plant and equipment (Notes 6 and 7):

            

Land

   251,419     264,148  

Buildings

   1,253,350     1,280,448  

Machinery and equipment

   2,705,251     2,840,184  

Construction in progress

   46,037     64,792  
    

 

     4,256,057     4,449,572  

Less accumulated depreciation

   3,046,555     3,150,677  
    

 

Net property, plant and equipment

   1,209,502     1,298,895  
    

 

Other assets:

            

Goodwill (Notes 2 and 8)

   418,907     410,627  

Intangible assets (Note 8)

   73,099     74,810  

Other assets (Note 11)

   443,702     744,807  
    

 

Total other assets

   935,708     1,230,244  
    

 

     7,438,012     7,834,693  
    

 

 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Balance Sheets

 

March 31, 2004 and 2003

 

     Yen (millions)

 

Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity


   2004

    2003

 

Current liabilities:

            

Short-term borrowings, including current portion of long-term debt (Notes 6, 9 and 17)

   290,208     333,686  

Trade payables:

            

Related companies (Note 4)

   41,325     32,104  

Notes

   36,162     29,615  

Accounts

   707,247     665,565  
    

 

Total trade payables

   784,734     727,284  
    

 

Accrued income taxes (Note 11)

   44,179     33,499  

Accrued payroll

   141,932     150,095  

Other accrued expenses (Note 18)

   696,741     683,569  

Deposits and advances from customers

   83,798     100,469  

Employees’ deposits

   124,800     125,024  

Other current liabilities (Notes 11 and 17)

   403,394     417,206  
    

 

Total current liabilities

   2,569,786     2,570,832  
    

 

Noncurrent liabilities:

            

Long-term debt (Notes 6, 9 and 17)

   460,639     588,202  

Retirement and severance benefits (Note 10)

   801,199     1,375,143  

Other liabilities (Note 11)

   26,697     11,939  
    

 

Total noncurrent liabilities

   1,288,535     1,975,284  
    

 

Minority interests

   128,115     110,177  

Stockholders’ equity:

            

Common stock (Notes 9 and 12):

            

Authorized    - 4,950,000,000 shares

Issued            - 2,453,053,497 shares (2,447,923,088 shares in 2003)

   258,740     258,738  

Capital surplus (Notes 9 and 12)

   1,230,476     1,219,686  

Legal reserve (Note 12)

   83,175     80,700  

Retained earnings (Note 12)

   2,442,504     2,432,052  

Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (Notes 5, 10, 13 and 16):

            

Cumulative translation adjustments

   (282,287 )   (161,124 )

Unrealized holding gains (losses) of available-for-sale securities

   88,104     (18,082 )

Unrealized gains (losses) of derivative instruments

   6,676     (1,090 )

Minimum pension liability adjustments

   (211,995 )   (525,346 )
    

 

Total accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)

   (399,502 )   (705,642 )
    

 

Treasury stock, at cost (Note 12):

            

134,645,885 shares (88,606,377 shares in 2003)

   (163,817 )   (107,134 )
    

 

Total stockholders’ equity

   3,451,576     3,178,400  

Commitments and contingent liabilities (Note 18)

            
    

 

     7,438,012     7,834,693  
    

 

 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Statements of Operations

 

Years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Revenues:

                  

Net sales:

                  

Related companies (Note 4)

   179,270     150,920     116,354  

Other

   7,300,474     7,250,794     6,957,483  
    

 

 

Total net sales

   7,479,744     7,401,714     7,073,837  

Interest income

   19,564     22,267     34,361  

Dividends received

   5,475     4,506     8,219  

Gain from the transfer of the substitutional portion of Japanese Welfare Pension Insurance (Note 10)

   72,228     —       —    

Other income (Notes 5, 6, 15 and 16)

   59,544     64,677     54,146  
    

 

 

Total revenues

   7,636,555     7,493,164     7,170,563  

Costs and expenses:

                  

Cost of sales (Notes 4 and 15)

   5,313,065     5,323,605     5,312,039  

Selling, general and administrative expenses (Note 15)

   1,971,187     1,951,538     1,960,796  

Interest expense

   27,744     32,805     45,088  

Other deductions (Notes 4, 5, 7, 8, 15 and 16)

   153,737     116,300     390,419  
    

 

 

Total costs and expenses

   7,465,733     7,424,248     7,708,342  
    

 

 

Income (loss) before income taxes

   170,822     68,916     (537,779 )

Provision for income taxes (Note 11):

                  

Current

   77,375     51,704     33,902  

Deferred

   21,160     19,572     (87,177 )
    

 

 

     98,535     71,276     (53,275 )
    

 

 

Income (loss) before minority interests and equity in earnings (losses) of associated companies

   72,287     (2,360 )   (484,504 )

Minority interests

   19,618     5,505     (56,666 )

Equity in earnings (losses) of associated companies (Note 4)

   (10,524 )   (11,588 )   59  
    

 

 

Net income (loss)

   42,145     (19,453 )   (427,779 )
    

 

 

     Yen

 

Net income (loss) per share of common stock (Note 14):

                  

Basic

   18.15     (8.70 )   (206.09 )

Diluted

   18.00     (8.70 )   (206.09 )

 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity

 

Years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Common stock (Notes 12 and 15):

                  

Balance at beginning of year

   258,738     258,737     210,994  

Issuance of common stock for conversion of bonds

   2     1     47,743  
    

 

 

Balance at end of year

   258,740     258,738     258,737  
    

 

 

Capital surplus (Notes 12 and 15):

                  

Balance at beginning of year

   1,219,686     682,848     621,267  

Issuance of common stock for conversion of bonds

   2     1     47,743  

Treasury stock provided for conversion of bonds

   4,209     —       —    

Stock issued under exchange offering (Note 2)

   6,579     537,487     —    

Transfer from legal reserve and retained earnings due to merger of subsidiaries

   —       —       11,008  

Capital transactions by consolidated and associated companies

   —       (650 )   2,830  
    

 

 

Balance at end of year

   1,230,476     1,219,686     682,848  
    

 

 

Legal reserve (Note 12):

                  

Balance at beginning of year

   80,700     82,647     88,499  

Transfer from (to) retained earnings

   2,475     (1,947 )   816  

Transfer to capital surplus due to merger of subsidiaries

   —       —       (6,668 )
    

 

 

Balance at end of year

   83,175     80,700     82,647  
    

 

 

Retained earnings (Note 12):

                  

Balance at beginning of year

   2,432,052     2,470,356     2,929,281  

Net income (loss)

   42,145     (19,453 )   (427,779 )

Cash dividends

   (29,218 )   (20,798 )   (25,990 )

Transfer from (to) legal reserve

   (2,475 )   1,947     (816 )

Transfer to capital surplus due to merger of subsidiaries

   —       —       (4,340 )
    

 

 

Balance at end of year

   2,442,504     2,432,052     2,470,356  
    

 

 

Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (Note 13):

                  

Balance at beginning of year

   (705,642 )   (154,543 )   (79,089 )

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax

   306,140     (551,099 )   (75,454 )
    

 

 

Balance at end of year

   (399,502 )   (705,642 )   (154,543 )
    

 

 

 

(Continued)


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity

 

Years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Treasury stock (Note 12):

                  

Balance at beginning of year

   (107,134 )   (92,185 )   (739 )

Repurchase of common stock

   (69,394 )   (115,770 )   (91,969 )

Stock exchanged under exchange offering (Note 2)

   —       100,821     —    

Sale of treasury stock

   —       —       523  

Conversion of bonds

   12,711     —       —    
    

 

 

Balance at end of year

   (163,817 )   (107,134 )   (92,185 )
    

 

 

Disclosure of comprehensive income (loss) (Note 13):

                  

Net income (loss)

   42,145     (19,453 )   (427,779 )

Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax:

                  

Translation adjustments

   (121,163 )   (106,003 )   102,832  

Unrealized holding gains (losses) of available-for-sale securities

   106,186     (68,894 )   (28,052 )

Unrealized gains (losses) of derivative instruments

   7,766     (1,218 )   128  

Minimum pension liability adjustments

   313,351     (374,984 )   (150,362 )
    

 

 

Total comprehensive income (loss)

   348,285     (570,552 )   (503,233 )
    

 

 

 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

 

Years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Cash flows from operating activities (Note 15):

                  

Net income (loss)

   42,145     (19,453 )   (427,779 )

Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash provided by operating activities:

                  

Depreciation and amortization

   278,177     302,141     362,052  

Net gain on sale of investments

   (11,327 )   (93 )   (6,160 )

Provision for doubtful receivables

   3,154     17,621     4,428  

Deferred income taxes

   21,160     19,572     (87,177 )

Write-down of investment securities (Notes 4 and 5)

   52,492     52,611     92,297  

Impairment loss on long-lived assets (Notes 7 and 8)

   11,666     2,375     24,420  

Minority interests

   19,618     5,505     (56,666 )

(Increase) decrease in trade receivables

   35,248     (72,604 )   200,966  

(Increase) decrease in inventories

   (37,016 )   82,573     270,360  

(Increase) decrease in other current assets

   13,450     27,996     (35,579 )

Increase (decrease) in trade payables

   87,226     162,378     (130,275 )

Increase (decrease) in accrued income taxes

   12,254     4,960     (31,505 )

Increase (decrease) in accrued expenses and other current liabilities

   10,782     79,252     9,199  

Increase (decrease) in retirement and severance benefits

   (67,332 )   16,622     (86,144 )

Other

   17,435     16,861     10,509  
    

 

 

Net cash provided by operating activities

   489,132     698,317     112,946  
    

 

 

Cash flows from investing activities (Note 15):

                  

Proceeds from sale of short-term investments

   —       10,523     36,976  

Purchase of short-term investments

   (702 )   —       (27,509 )

Proceeds from disposition of investments and advances

   68,468     121,001     172,763  

Increase in investments and advances

   (207,869 )   (80,774 )   (123,330 )

Capital expenditures

   (275,544 )   (246,603 )   (342,107 )

Proceeds from disposals of property, plant and equipment

   113,008     58,270     142,924  

(Increase) decrease in finance receivables

   30,697     29,158     60,731  

(Increase) decrease in time deposits

   202,808     96,371     29,742  

Other

   (16,311 )   877     (24,662 )
    

 

 

Net cash used in investing activities

   (85,445 )   (11,177 )   (74,472 )
    

 

 

 

(Continued)


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MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD.

AND SUBSIDIARIES

 

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

 

Years ended March 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002

 

     Yen (millions)

 
     2004

    2003

    2002

 

Cash flows from financing activities (Note 15):

                  

Decrease in short-term borrowings

   (39,577 )   (106,630 )   (83,703 )

Increase (decrease) in deposits and advances from customers and employees

   (15,787 )   (20,589 )   (22,739 )

Proceeds from long-term debt

   108,026     122,288     447,458  

Repayments of long-term debt

   (228,039 )   (293,088 )   (218,159 )

Dividends paid

   (29,218 )   (20,798 )   (25,990 )

Dividends paid to minority interests

   (4,675 )   (8,267 )   (10,112 )

Repurchase of common stock (Note 12)

   (69,394 )   (115,770 )   (91,969 )

Decrease of treasury stock (Note 12)

   —       —       523  

Other

   5,963     —       5,107  
    

 

 

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

   (272,701 )   (442,854 )   416  
    

 

 

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

   (23,442 )   (9,948 )   16,541  
    

 

 

Net increase in cash and cash equivalents

   107,544     234,338     55,431  

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

   1,167,470     933,132     877,701  
    

 

 

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

   1,275,014     1,167,470     933,132  
    

 

 

 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


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