-
In January 2026, Toho Co., Ltd. held a board meeting and approved a simplified absorption-type company split, transferring its overseas video licensing and content exploitation business to wholly owned subsidiary TOHO Global Inc., while also revising guidance to lift its fiscal year-end dividend forecast to ¥62.5 per share and annual dividend to ¥105 per share.
-
This move consolidates Toho’s international licensing operations under TOHO Global and, coupled with higher dividend guidance backed by strong film hits and steady non-film segments, signals a clearer focus on monetizing its intellectual property while increasing cash returns to shareholders.
-
We will now consider how Toho’s higher dividend commitment, underpinned by strong film performance, may shape its broader investment narrative.
We’ve found 13 US stocks that are forecast to pay a dividend yield of over 6% next year. See the full list for free.
To own Toho today, you need to believe in its ability to keep turning hit films and long-lived franchises into steady, high-quality earnings, while tightening execution around capital returns. The latest move to fold overseas licensing into TOHO Global and lift the annual dividend to ¥105 per share fits that story: it tidies up the structure around international IP monetization and signals a willingness to share more cash with shareholders in a business that is not priced cheaply on earnings. In the short term, the key catalysts still sit with box office performance, IP exploitation and how consistently management sticks to its Mid-Term Management Plan 2028. The elevated dividend also sharpens an existing risk: paying more out increases pressure if film profits soften.
However, one particular pressure point in that payout story is easy to miss at first glance.
Toho’s shares are on the way up, but could they be overextended? Uncover how much higher they are than fair value.
The single Simply Wall St Community fair value estimate of ¥9,301.11 per share matches consensus, showing no internal spread yet still reminding you that opinions can diverge once more voices join in. Set against Toho’s richer earnings multiple and the now higher dividend commitment, it leaves plenty of room for readers to weigh how much IP strength and capital returns really justify paying up for this business.
Explore another fair value estimate on Toho – why the stock might be worth as much as 15% more than the current price!
Disagree with this assessment? Create your own narrative in under 3 minutes – extraordinary investment returns rarely come from following the herd.






