Form 6-K
Table of Contents

 

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 6 - K

 

Report of Foreign Private Issuer

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of

the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

 

For the month of June 2004.

 

Commission File Number: 2-58155

 

KUBOTA CORPORATION

(Translation of registrant’s name into English)

 

2-47, Shikitsuhigashi 1-chome, Naniwa-ku, Osaka, Japan

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F :

 

Form 20-F x    Form 40-F ¨

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1) :                     

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7) :                     

 

Indicate by check mark whether by furnishing the information contained in this Form, the registrant is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 :

 

Yes ¨    No x

 

If “Yes” is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b) : 82-                 

 



Table of Contents

Information furnished on this form:

 

EXHIBITS

 

Exhibit Number

    
1.    Convocation notice for the 114th ordinary general meeting of shareholders (Wednesday, June 9, 2004)
2.    Resolution of the ordinary general meeting of shareholders (Friday, June 25, 2004)
3.    Notice on repurchase of share on market (Friday, June 25, 2004)

 


Table of Contents

(Translation)

 

June 9, 2004

 

To: Shareholders

 

CONVOCATION NOTICE FOR

THE 114th ORDINARY GENERAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

 

Dear Sirs:

 

Notice is hereby given that the 114th Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders of the Company will be held as described hereunder. Your attendance is respectfully requested.

 

Date and Time:

  

10:00 a.m. on Friday, June 25, 2004

Place:

  

Convention Hall of the Company

    

2-47, Shikitsuhigashi 1-chome, Naniwa-ku, Osaka

 

Matters for which the meeting is held:

Matters to be reported:

Balance sheet as of March 31, 2004 and the statement of operation and the business report for the 114th period (from April 1, 2003 to March 31, 2004).

Matters requiring resolutions:

1st Subject for Discussion:

Matters concerning the approval of proposed appropriation of unappropriated retained earnings for the 114th period.

2nd Subject for Discussion:

Matters concerning partial amendment to the Articles of Incorporation. Summary of the agenda is described in the referential materials for exercise of voting rights on pages 22.

3rd Subject for Discussion:

Matters concerning election of 20 directors.

4th Subject for Discussion:

Matters concerning election of 1 corporate auditor.

5th Subject for Discussion:

Matters concerning payment of retirement allowances to retiring directors.

 

If you are unable to attend the meeting, we cordially request that you study the referential materials annexed hereto, indicate your approval or disapproval of the proposals on the enclosed form of the voting exercise card with your signature thereon and return it to us or exercise your voting rights through Voting Rights Website (http://www.web54.net)

 

(Please look at page 30 “Exercise of Voting Rights using the Internet”)

 

When you attend the meeting, please present the enclosed form of the voting exercise card at the reception desk of the meeting. When you exercise voting rights through the Voting Rights Website, please use the Exercise of Voting Rights Code and temporary password written on the right of the voting exercise card.

 

Yours very truly,

 
Hatakake Daisuke
President and
Representative Director
KUBOTA CORPORATION
2-47, Shikitsuhigashi 1-chome
Naniwa-ku, Osaka

 

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Table of Contents

REFERENTIAL MATERIALS FOR THE MATTERS TO BE

REPORTED AND THE 1ST SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION

 

Business Report for the 114th Period

(from April 1, 2003, to March 31, 2004)

 

I. Overview of Operations

(1)Business Results and Future Challenges

 

General Condition

 

During the year under review, the Japanese economy showed a trend of gradual recovery, through the favorable condition in Japanese stock market, expanded private capital expenditures, or private consumption, though public works spending remained sluggish. Overseas, the U.S. economy was robust despite some concerns, and in Europe, economic recovery was feeble and couldn’t enjoy substantial growth.

 

Under this economic environment, in line with its “Medium-Term Management Strategy”, Kubota Corporation (collectively “the Company”) augmented its efforts to restructure its operations and strove to increase its profitability. As a part of these efforts, our leasing subsidiary, Kubota Lease Co., Ltd., was transferred to Sumisho Auto Lease Co., Ltd., in April 2003. In December 2003, the Company established a new joint operation entity, “Kubota Matsushitadenko Exterior Works, Ltd.” with Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd., in order to shift our building materials operation to the new entity.

 

While the Company resolutely promoted those restructuring measures, the Company powerfully continued sales promotion and cost cut. In its Farm & Industrial Machinery operations centering on farm equipment, the Company did its utmost to expand its sales and market shares, leveraged by the attractive sales campaign or highly competitive product lines produced through concurrent engineering. In the public works spending related business, the Company endeavored to regain profitability through the improvement in productivity and the cost cut in every process, such as manufacturing, procurement, and distribution. In the Environmental Engineering Group, the Company responded to market shrinkage and intensifying competition by drastic cost cut in concurrent engineering or reorganization of procurement system. Additionally, for the future growth, the Company endeavored to expand its businesses to private sector or new fields.

 

As for sales, although overseas sales increased favorably, particularly in North America, domestic sales declined, reflecting the business transfer of the building materials business and a large decline in environmental engineering business. Accordingly net sales were ¥663.8 billion, a decrease of ¥8.6 billion from the prior year.

 

Ordinary income was ¥45.9 billion, an increase of ¥19.2 billion from the prior year, due to the relentless efforts to improve productivity, reduce personnel cost and selling, general, and administrative costs. Net income was ¥21.7 billion, by ¥29.9 billion of improvement from the prior year. This improvement was owing to the large decrease of extraordinary loss, in addition to the favorable ordinary income.

 

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Table of Contents

Result by Product Group

 

In the Industrial & Material Systems Group, while the public works spending stayed stagnant, the Company strove to increase its export of ductile iron pipes. However, such increase of exports couldn’t offset the decline of other domestic demands. In the end total sales were ¥161.7 billion, a decrease of ¥3.3 billion.

 

In the Farm & Industrial Machinery Group, exports of tractors, engines, construction machinery, expanded considerably. Sales growth in North America was spurred by new product launches and promotional campaigns featuring zero-interest financing. In EU countries, sales of tractors and construction machinery were also strong. In Japan, the Company aggressively launched attractive new products, and also strove to conduct sales promotion campaign in order to stimulate the market and augment its market share. As a result, total sales were ¥369.5 billion, an increase of ¥28.1 billion.

 

In the Environmental Engineering Group, while public works spending were declining, the introduction of diversified bidding processes and other factors led to a fierce competition for receiving orders. Moreover, the rush in shipments of large orders in the prior year caused a large drop in the sales of recycling engineering products. Consequently, total sales were ¥98.6 billion, a decrease of ¥19.1 billion.

 

In the Housing Materials & Utilities Group, total sales were ¥33.9 billion, a decrease of ¥14.1 billion. The main reason of this decrease was the business transfer of the building materials operation to Kubota Matsushitadenko Exterior Works, Ltd.

 

Capital expenditures

 

The Company spent ¥7.3 billion on its capital expenditures, primarily on the rationalization of manufacturing processes.

 

Financing

 

Finance for capital expenditure were primarily raised from internally generated funds.

 

Future Challenges

 

Although the Japanese economy will have an opportunity for building a sustained growth, public investment will continue declining, and the appreciation of yen against the U.S. dollar may have a negative impact on both exports and capital expenditures which have contributed to the recovery of the Japanese economy. Moreover, while price increase of raw materials may cause damages to corporate profitability, there is concern that the U.S. and Euro economies may slow down. All things considered, the Company expects the difficult economic conditions to continue.

 

Under such conditions, the Company will make every effort to overcome the difficult business environment, continue to work hard towards the vigorous and steady implementation of the new version of the Medium-Term Management Strategy, and establish the business structure and profit structure with stability and growth capability.

 

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Table of Contents

In the public works spending related business, the Company will make rigorous efforts for cost reduction and spending control. At the same time, in overseas businesses of the Farm & Industrial Machinery Group, which is the driving force for the growth of the Company, the Company will implement expansion strategies by taking measures such as continuous new products introduction, and development of peripheral businesses.

 

As for the financial scheme, the Company plans to continue strengthening its balance sheet so that the Company will be able to provide funding for its future business expansion and cope with rapidly changing environment. The Company will also continue to streamline its balance sheet, and reduce interest-bearing debt. Additionally, the Company will take measures to increase its shareholders’ equity ratio representing the ratio of shareholders’ equity to total assets. At the same time, the Company will continue to purchase treasury stock in order to reduce the number of outstanding shares.

 

Regarding corporate governance systems, the Company has moved ahead with such measures as to clarify the management responsibilities of directors, strengthen the supervisory abilities of auditors, and augment its compliance programs. The Company will continue proactively to strengthen its internal control systems and enhance its corporate governance systems with the goals of further increasing management transparency and efficiency.

 

Through these diverse strategic initiatives, the Company will be doing its utmost to increase its profitability and corporate value.

 

In closing, we hope for the continued understanding and support of shareholders.

 

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Table of Contents

Net Sales by Product Group

 

     Net sales
(In billions of yen)


   Percentage of
previous Period


    Percentage of
total sales


 

Industrial & Material Systems Group

   161.7    98.0 %   24.3 %

Farm & Industrial Machinery Group

   369.5    108.2     55.7  

Environmental Engineering Group

   98.6    83.7     14.9  

Housing Materials & Utilities Group

   33.9    70.5     5.1  
    
  

 

Total

   663.8    98.7     100.0  

 

(2) Business Results and Financial Status

 

Results by Situation of Consolidation

 

Overview of certain consolidated financial statement information of the Company was follows:

 

Year

(period)


   2001
(111th)


   2002
(112th)


   2003
(113th)


   2004
(114th)


Net Sales (in billion of yen)

   984.7      965.7        926.1      930.2  

Income before income taxes, minority interest in earnings of subsidiaries, and equity in net income (loss) of affiliated companies (in billion of yen)

   60.7      28.6        6.1      27.0  

Net Income (in billion of yen)

   9.7      9.5      D 8.0      11.7  

Net Income per share (in Yen)

   6.95    6.78    D 5.84    8.72

Total assets (in billion of yen)

   1,290.7      1,200.1        1,139.0      1,124.2  

Shareholders’ equity (in billion of yen)

   434.9      394.9        315.4      391.0  

Shareholders’ equity per share (in Yen)

   308.54    284.07      234.45    291.81

 

Notes

 

  1. The mark of triangle indicates deficit.

 

  2. The consolidated financial statements of the Company have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

 

Non Consolidation Results

 

Year

(period)


  

2001

(111 th)


   2002
(112 th)


  

2003

(113 th)


   2004
(114 th)


Net Sales (in billion of yen)

     704.4      672.5        672.4      663.8  

Ordinary income (in billion of yen)

     30.7      23.9        26.7      45.9  

Net income (in billion of yen)

   D 34.9      0.1      D 8.2      21.7  

Net income per share (in Yen)

   D 24.79    0.09    D 6.03    16.16

Total assets (in billion of yen)

     998.6      943.2        858.8      867.6  

Shareholders’ equity (in billion of yen)

     418.8      371.7        329.1      383.9  

Shareholders’ equity per share (in Yen)

     297.12    267.26      244.48    286.35

 

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Table of Contents

Notes

 

  1. The mark of triangle indicates deficit.

 

  2. From the current business term, financial statements, etc. have been prepared in accordance with the Ordinance for Enforcement of the Commercial Code of Japan as amended by the “Ordinance to partly amend the Ordinance for Enforcement of the Commercial Code of Japan” (Ordinance of the Ministry of Justice, No. 7, February 28, 2003).

 

  3. Net income per share is calculated based on the weighted average number of outstanding common shares for the period.

Shareholders’ equity per share is calculated based on the number of outstanding common shares at the end of the period.

Since prior year, these per share amounts have been calculated after deducting the number of shares of treasury stock.

 

During the 112th period, despite increases of domestic sales in the Environmental Engineering Group; the sales of other groups including Pipe & Fluid Systems Engineering Group and export sales to EU or North America declined sharply. As a result, by sharp reduction of sales, net sales under review were 672.5 billion, down by ¥31.8 billion compared with prior year.

 

Ordinary income was ¥23.9 billion, down by ¥6.7 billion compared with prior year.

 

By such extraordinary losses as the loss from disposition of subsidiaries, mainly attributed to transfer of shares of Kubota House Co., Ltd, net income was 0.1 billion.

 

During the 113th period, despite decreases of domestic sales in all business divisions; export sales increased substantially centering around North America. As a result, the net sales of Kubota remained at the same level as the previous fiscal year, ¥672.4 billion. At the profit level, due to the increase in operating income and improvement of non- operating income and expenses, the ordinary income increased to ¥26.7 billion by ¥2.7 billion compared with prior year. Kubota Corporation recognized a special gain related to the transfer to the government of the substitutional portion of the pension benefit obligation and related plan assets on an approval basis. However, due to the large valuation losses on marketable securities and those on the stocks of our subsidiaries, and special retirement allowance for the voluntary early retirement program ended March 2003, the bottom line became a net deficit of ¥8.2 billion.

 

Performance during the 114th period is described in item (1) of this section

 

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Table of Contents

2. Operations of the Company (as of March 31, 2004)

(1) Main Line of Business

 

Industrial & Material Systems Group

 

Ductile Iron Pipe, FW (Filament Winding) Pipe, Spiral Welded Steel Pipe (Steel Pipe Pile, Steel Pipe Sheet Pile), Preinsulated Pipe, Plastic Pipe (Unplasticized Polyvinyl Chloride Pipe, Polyethylene Pipe, Plastic Lining Steel Pipe, Fittings and Accessories), Valves (for water supply, sewage system), Industrial Materials (Reformer Tubes, Hearth Roll, G-Columns, G-Pile, Rolls for Steel Mills, Ceramics, TXAX (friction materials), Castings for engines, cast-iron drainage pipe, single stack drain fitting, Ductile Tunnel Segment, Ductile Frames)

 

Farm & Industrial Machinery Group

 

Farm Equipment (Tractors, Tillers, Power Tillers, Combine Harvesters, Reaper Binders, Harvesters, Rice Transplanters), Ancillary Tools and Implements for Agriculture (Implements, Attachments, Rice Dryers, Vegetable Transplanters, Vegetable Harvesters, Multipurpose Warehouse, Cleaning and Vending Machines for Rice, Small Auto-trucks for agricultural use, Electric Scooter, Automatic Rice Cooker and other equipment for agricultural use), Farm Facilities (Cooperative Facilities for rice drying and rice seedling, Rice Mill Plant, Dairy and Stock Raising Facilities, Gardening Facilities, Cooperative separating facilities for fruits and vegetables), Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn and Garden Equipment, Lawn Mower, Utility Vehicle), Engines (for farming, construction and industrial machinery and generators), Construction Machinery (Mini Excavators, Wheel Loaders, Carriers, Tractor Shovels, Welders, Generators and other construction machinery related products), Vending Machines (for drinks, tobaccos, tickets), Electronic Equipped Machinery (Scales, Weighing and Measuring Control System and CAD Systems), Air-conditioning Equipment, Photovoltanic Roofing, Foundry Plant Engineering,

 

Environmental Engineering Group

 

Water and Sewage Engineering Plant (Sewage Treatment Plants, Sewage Sludge Incineration and Melting Plants, Water Purification Facilities), Water Environmental Engineering Plant (Night-soil Treatment Plants, Submerged Membrane System for Night-soil and Wastewater Purification, Landfill Leachate Treatment Facilities, Soil Remediation Plants, Industrial Wastewater Treatment Plants, Livestock Wastes Treatment Plants, Food Wastes Treatment Plants), Solid Waste Engineering Plant (Refuse Incineration and Melting Plants, Industrial Waste Treatment Plants, Waste Pulverizing Plants, Waste Recycling Plants, Crushing Plants, Grinding Mills), Pumps (Furnishing, Installation and Commissioning of Pumping Equipment for Water Supply, Sewerage, Irrigation and Various Fields, Operation Systems of Pumping Equipment Inclusive of Remote Control System, Fountains, Small Scale Hydraulic Power Generating Facility, Wastewater Treatment Facilities for Farming Communities)

 

Housing Materials & Utilities Group

 

Johkasou Systems (Septic Tanks) and Bathtubs.

 

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Table of Contents

(2) Main Offices and Factories

 

    

Name


 

Location


Offices    Head Office   Osaka-shi
     Tokyo Office   Chuo-ku, Tokyo
     Hokkaido Regional Office   Sapporo-shi
     Tohoku Regional Office   Sendai-shi
     Chubu Regional Office   Nagoya-shi
     Chugoku Regional Office   Hiroshima-shi
     Shikoku Regional Office   Takamatsu-shi
     Kyushu Regional Office   Fukuoka-shi
     Hanshin Office   Amagasaki-shi
     Kyuhoji Business Center   Yao-shi
     Farm & Industrial Machinery Sapporo   Sapporo-shi
     Farm & Industrial Machinery Higashi-Nihon   Saitama-shi
     Farm & Industrial Machinery Nishi-Nihon   Amagasaki-shi
     Farm & Industrial Machinery Fukuoka   Fukuoka-shi
     Yokohama Branch   Yokohama-shi
Factories    Hanshin Plant   Amagasaki-shi
     Keiyo Plant   Funabashi-shi & Ichikawa-shi
     Sakai P.V.C. Pipe Plant   Sakai-shi
     Odawara Plant   Odawara-shi
     Shiga Plant   Kouga-gun, Shiga-ken
     Okajima Plant   Osaka-shi
     Sakai Plant   Sakai-shi
     Utsunomiya Plant   Utsunomiya-shi
     Tsukuba Plant   Tsukuba-gun, Ibaraki-ken
     Sakai-Rinkai Plant   Sakai-shi
     Hirakata Plant   Hirakata-shi
     Ryugasaki Plant   Ryugasaki-shi

 

(3) Employees (excluding temporary employees)

 

     Number of
employees


   Change from
previous period


    Average
age


   Average years
of service


Total/Average

   11,641    (810 )   41.4    19.9

 

(4) Stock Data

 

Number of Authorized Common Shares

   2,000,000,000

Number of Common Shares Outstanding

   1,409,808,978

ƒ Number of Shareholders

   56,514

Warrants

    

 

The situation regarding warrants issued based on the pre-reform version of the Commercial Code is as follows:

 

  1. No.8 Issue of Unsecured Convertible Bonds Issued on August 25, 1994

Balance of convertible bonds: ¥19,513 million

Type of stock issuable upon conversion: ordinary common stock

Conversion price: ¥769

 

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Table of Contents
  2. No.9 Issue of Unsecured Convertible Bonds Issued on August 25, 1994

Balance of convertible bonds: ¥18,627 million

Type of stock issuable upon conversion: ordinary common stock

Conversion price: ¥769

 

Principal Shareholders (Top 10)

 

              

(Thousands of

shares)


Name


   Numberof
Shares (*1)


  

%of

voting
shares


   Kubota’s
holding(*2)


   %

Japan Trustee Services Bank, Ltd.

   130,212    9.75    —      —  

The Master Trust Bank of Japan, Ltd.

   123,778    9.27    —      —  

Nippon Mutual Life Insurance Company

   102,672    7.69    —      —  

Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Company

   82,994    6.21    —      —  

Trust & Custody Servises Bank, Ltd as Trustee for FUJI BANK, LIMITED Retirement Benefit Trust Account re-entrusted by Mizuho Trust and Banking Co., Ltd

   69,240    5.18    —      —  

The Dai-ichi Mutual Life Insurance Company

   48,459    3.63    —      —  

Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation

   45,006    3.37    —      —  

Kubota Fund(Employees Stock Ownership plan)

   36,442    2.73    —      —  

Trust & Custody Services Bank, Ltd

   27,511    2.06    —      —  

Sumitomo Life Insurance Company

   27,036    2.02    —      —  

 

(*1) The number of Kubota’s common shares owned by the above-listed shareholders.

 

(*2) The number of common shares of the above-listed shareholders owned by Kubota.

 

Notes:

 

  1. Kubota is not included as a large shareholder, although it owns 69,074,746 shares of stock.

 

  2. Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Company changed its name because The Meiji Mutual Life Insurance Company merged with Yasuda Life Ins.

 

(5) Purchase, Sale and Possession of treasury stock

 

 Purchased stock

 

Acquisition based on the general meeting of stockholders resolution by the provision of commercial code Article 210

The number of shares acquired: 5,250,000

The amount of shares acquired: ¥2,178,750,000

Acquisition of shares less than the minimum unit

The number of shares acquired: 116,706

The amount of shares acquired: ¥44,579,227

 

Sold stock:

 

Selling of shares less than the minimum unit

The number of shares sold: 5,549

The amount of shares sold: ¥1,894,122

ƒ Retired Stock:

 

None

 

Possession of stock at the end of the period:

 

The number of shares: 69,074,746

 

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Table of Contents

Notes: The Company resolved, at the board of directors’ meeting on May 14, 2004, to retire the treasury stock under Article 212 of the Commercial Code of Japan.

 

The details are as follows;

 

  1. Treasury stock for retirement: Common Shares

 

  2. Number of treasury stock for retirement: 69,000,000

 

  3. Schedule of retirement of treasury stock: June 30, 2004

 

  4. Number of Common Shares Outstanding after retirement: 1,340,808,978

 

(6) Consolidation

 

 Important Subsidiaries

 

Name


  

Common stock


   % of voting
shares


   

Major operations


Kubota Construction Co., Ltd.

   ¥1.0 billion    100.0     Design and construction of water supply systems, sewage systems, pipe laying and civil engineering

Kubota Credit Co., Ltd.

   ¥0.3 billion    51.7     Financing to purchasers
          17.2 *   of farm equipment, construction
                machinery and related products in Japan

Kubota U.S.A., Inc.

   US$ 167 million    100.0     Administration of subsidiaries in the U.S.A.

Kubota Tractor Corporation

   US$ 37 million    90.0 *   Sales of tractors, small-sized construction machinery and other machinery in the U.S.A

Kubota Credit Corporation, U.S.A.

   US$ 8 million    10.0     Financing to purchasers
          90.0 *   of tractors and related products in the U.S.A.

Kubota Manufacturing of America Corporation

   US$ 10 million    100.0 *   Manufacturing and sales of tractors and implements

Kubota Engine America Corporation

   US$ 10 million    90.0 *   Sales, engineering and after-sales services of engines, engine parts, and engine accessories

Kubota Canada Ltd.

   Can$ 6 million    80.0     Sales of tractors, engines, small-sized construction machinery and other machinery in Canada

Kubota Metal Corporation

   Can$15 million    100.0     Manufacturing and sales of cast steel products in North America, mainly in Canada

Kubota Europe S.A.S.

   EUR 11 million    73.8     Sales of tractors, tillers, engines and small-sized construction machinery in Europe, mainly in France

Kubota Baumaschinen GmbH

   EUR 14 million    100.0     Manufacturing and sale of small-sized construction machinery in Europe, mainly in Germany

Kubota (Deutschland) GmbH

   EUR 3 million    80.0     Sales of tractors, tillers, engines and other machinery in Germany

Kubota (U.K.) Limited.

   £2 million    60.0     Sales of tractors, tillers, engines small-sized construction machinery and other machinery in England and Ireland

 

* Indirect holding

 

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Table of Contents

Consolidation Results

 

Kubota transferred shares of Kubota Lease Corporation to Sumitomo Auto Leasing Corporation on April, 2003.

 

Additionally, in December, 2003, Matsushita Electric Works, Ltd. (“MEW”) and the Company established and held a 50% ownership in “Kubota Matsushitadenko Exterior Works, Ltd.” the joint operation entity, into which the Company transferred its roofing and siding materials business. (It is the companies in which Kubota’s investments are accounted for by the equity method in its consolidated financial statement)

 

The number of consolidated subsidiaries is 119 (including the above-listed 13), a increase of 1 subsidiary from the previous period. The number of companies in which Kubota’s investments are accounted for by the equity method on its consolidated financial statements is 36, a decrease of 11 from the previous period.

 

Consolidated net sales for the 114th period amounted to ¥930.2 billion.

 

(Consolidated net sales for the 113th period amounted to ¥926.1 billion.)

 

Consolidated net income for the 114th period amounted to ¥11.7 billion.

 

(Consolidated net deficit for the 113th period amounted to ¥8.0 billion.)

 

The consolidated financial statements of the Company have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

 

(7) Principal Creditors

 

Name


  

Balance

of the loan
(In billions
of yen)


   Number of
Shares(*)


  

% of voting

shares(*)


Mizuho Corporate Bank, Ltd

   ¥ 26.5    —      —  

Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation

   ¥ 26.5    45,006    3.37

 

(*) The number of Kubota’s common shares owned by the above-listed principal creditors.

 

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(8) Directors and Corporate Auditors

 

Abbreviation of Titles and Responsibilities:

 

C = Chairman, VC = Vice Chairman, RD = Representative Director, P = President, EVP = Executive Vice President, EMD = Executive Managing Director, MD = Managing Director, D = Director, CA = Corporate Auditor, GM = General Manager.

 

Title


      

Name


  

Responsibilities and principal position


P&RD        Daisuke Hatakake     

EVP

&RD

       Tomomi Soh    Tokyo Office, GM of Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division

EVP

&RD

       Mikio Kinoshita    Research & Development Planning & Promotion Dept., GM of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
EMD        Tsuyoshi Hayashi    Construction Machinery Division, Manufacturing Planning & Promotion Dept., GM of Manufacturing Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
MD        Akio Nishino    GM of Environmental Control Plant Consolidated Division, GM of Tokyo Office
MD        Masaru Ishiguro    Corporate Compliance Headquarters, General Affairs Dept., Tokyo Administration Dept.
MD        Akira Seike    Farm Facilities Division, GM of Sales Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
MD        Toshiyuki Yotsumoto    GM of R & D Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
MD        Yoshihiro Fujio    Secretary & Public Relations Dept., Personnel Dept., Health & Safety Planning & Promotion Dept., Housing & Building Materials Business Coordination Dept., GM of Head Office
MD        Moriya Hayashi    GM of International Operations Headquarters of Farm & IndustrialMachinery Consolidated Division, GM of Tractor Division
D        Tadahiko Kinoshita    Chairman of Kubota Matsushitadenko Exterior Works, Ltd.
D        Tadahiko Urabe    GM of Plastic Pipe Division
D        Masateru Yoshikawa    Environmental Protection Dept.
D        Toshihiro Fukuda    Related Products Division, Deputy GM of Sales Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division, GM of Farm Machinery Division
D        Yasuo Masumoto    GM of Production Control Headquarters of Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division

D

 

*

  

Junichi Maeda

  

GM of Ductile Iron Pipe Division

 

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Table of Contents
D   *   

Yoshiharu Nishiguchi

  

Air Condition Equipment Division, Corporate

Planning & Control Dept., Finance & Accounting Dept.

D   *   

Eisaku Shinohara

  

Deputy GM of R & D Headquarters of Farm &

Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division, G M of

Vehicle Technology Generalization Dept.

D   *   

Nobuo Izawa

  

GM of Pumps Division

CA       

Masayoshi Fujita

  

Full-time

CA       

Masamichi Nakahiro

  

Full-time

CA   *   

Susumu Sumikura

  

Full-time

CA   *   

Teisuke Sono

    

 

Notes: 1.   Messrs. Masayoshi Fujita and Teisuke Sono are the outside corporate auditors as provided for in Paragraph 1, Article 18 of the “Law Concerning Special Measures under the Commercial Code with respect to Audit, etc. of Corporations (Kabushiki-Kaisha)” of Japan.

 

     2. Changes of Directors and Corporate Auditors during the fiscal year

 

   Persons indicated by an asterisk (*) in the above table were newly elected at the 113th Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders held on June 26, 2003 and assumed their offices.

 

  Executive Managing Director of the Company, namely Mr. Takeshi Oka, Managing Director, namely Messrs. Tatsuo Arata, Masakatsu Yamamoto, Okihiro Asada, Yoji Okihara and Masatake Matsui, Director, namely Messrs. Koh Shimizu and Toshi Nakajima, and Corporate Auditor, namely Messrs. Toshi Tanaka, Tohru Hirata and Sunao Kobayashi retired at the conclusion of The 113th Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders on June 26, 2003.

 

      3. Title and Responsibilities and principal position of Directors on April 1, 2004.

 

Title


  

Name


  

Responsibilities and principal position


EVP

&RD

  

Tomomi Soh

  

GM of Sales & Marketing, Tokyo Office

EVP

&RD

  

Mikio Kinoshita

  

GM of Research & Development, Research &

Development Planning & Promotion Dept.

EMD

  

Tsuyoshi Hayashi

    

EMD

  

Akio Nishino

  

Tokyo Administration Dept., GM of Environmental

Control Plant Consolidated Division, GM of Tokyo

Office, Chairman of Kubota Construction Co., Ltd

EMD

  

Yoshihiro Fujio

  

Personnel Dept., Health & Safety Planning &

Promotion Dept., GM of Industrial & Material

Systems Consolidated Division, GM of Head Office

EMD

  

Moriya Hayashi

  

GM of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated

Division, GM of International Operations

Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division

MD

  

Masaru Ishiguro

    

MD

  

Akira Seike

  

Farm Machinery Division, Farm Facilities Division,

GM of Sales Headquarters of Farm & Industrial

Machinery Consolidated Division

 

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Table of Contents

MD

   Toshiyuki Yotsumoto     

MD

   Tadahiko Urabe   

GM of Plastic Pipe Division

MD

   Toshihiro Fukuda   

Corporate Compliance Headquarters, Environmental

Protection Dept., General Affairs Dept.

MD

   Yasuo Masumoto   

Manufacturing Planning & Promotion Dept., GM of

Production Control Headquarters of Industrial &

Material Systems Consolidated Division

D

   Masateru Yoshikawa   

Chairman of Kubota Systeme.Inc

D

   Yoshiharu Nishiguchi   

Air Condition Equipment Division, Septic Tanks

Division, Housing & Building Materials Business

Coordination Dept., PV Business Planning &

Promotion Dept., Secretary & Public Relations Dept.,

Corporate Planning & Control Dept., Finance & Accounting Dept.

D

   Eisaku Shinohara   

GM of R & D Headquarters of Farm & Industrial

Machinery Consolidated Division, GM of Vehicle

Technology Generalization Dept.

 

Note: All figures in this Business Report have been rounded down.

 

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Table of Contents

Balance Sheet

 

     as of March 31, 2004

 
     (In millions of yen)  

Current assets:

   ¥ 450,907  

Cash and deposits

     49,379  

Trade notes receivable

     51,789  

Trade accounts receivable

     220,065  

Securities

     2,999  

Finished goods

     33,880  

Semi-finished goods

     8,158  

Work-in-process

     13,001  

Raw materials

     5,993  

Supplies

     1,227  

Prepaid expenses

     1,229  

Deferred tax assets

     19,508  

Short-term loans receivable

     64,634  

Other current assets

     10,040  

Allowance for doubtful receivables

     (31,000 )

Non current assets:

     416,783  

Property, plant and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation:

     165,586  

Buildings

     46,334  

Structures

     6,855  

Machinery and equipment

     34,584  

Transportation equipment

     158  

Tools, furniture and fixtures

     5,641  

Land

     70,590  

Construction in progress

     1,423  

Intangibles:

     4,991  

Patents

     21  

Leasehold rights

     31  

Facility utility rights

     275  

Software

     4,662  

Investments:

     246,204  

Investment securities

     152,438  

Stock investments in subsidiaries

     40,184  

Other investments

     1,137  

Other investments in subsidiaries

     3,070  

Long-term loans receivable

     25,773  

Long-term loans receivable from employees

     19  

Long-term prepaid expenses

     893  

Deferred tax assets

     24,484  

Other non-current assets

     26,982  

Allowance for doubtful receivables

     (28,779 )

Total assets

   ¥ 867,690  
    


 

- 15 -


Table of Contents
     as of March 31, 2004

 
     (In millions of yen)  

Liabilities:

   ¥ 483,765  

Current liabilities:

     300,877  

Trade notes payable

     9,369  

Trade accounts payable

     141,598  

Short-term borrowings

     49,577  

Current portion of convertible debentures

     19,513  

Other accounts payable

     9,402  

Accrued income taxes

     9,664  

Accrued expenses

     34,186  

Advances received from customers

     2,445  

Deposits received

     23,872  

Reserve for warranty costs

     1,020  

Other current liabilities

     227  

Long-term liabilities:

     182,887  

Bonds

     10,000  

Convertible debentures

     18,627  

Long-term borrowings

     86,517  

Liabilities for severance payments to the employees

     66,685  

Liabilities for severance payments to the members of the board

     541  

Allowance for losses from guarantees of loans

     500  

Other long-term liabilities

     17  

Shareholders’ equity:

     383,925  

Common stock

     78,156  

Capital surplus

     67,159  

Additional paid-in capital

     67,159  

Retained earnings

     207,783  

Legal reserve

     19,539  

Voluntary reserve

     165,978  

Reserve for special depreciation

     36  

General reserve

     165,942  

Unappropriated retained earnings at end of the period

     22,266  

Appraisal gains on stocks

     54,730  

Treasury stock:

     (23,904 )

Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity

   ¥ 867,690  
    


 

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Statement of Income

 

(Year ended March 31, 2004)

 

Ordinary income and expenses

 

           (In millions of yen)

Operating income and expenses:

            

Revenue:

            

Sales

   663,827       663,827

Cost and expenses:

            

Cost of sales

   497,534        

Selling, general and administrative expenses

   124,462       621,997

Operating income

           41,829

Non-operating income and expenses:

            

Non-operating income:

            

Interest

   546        

Dividends

   4,854        

Other

   7,692       13,093

Non-operating expenses:

            

Interest

   1,794        

Other

   7,164       8,959

Ordinary income

           45,964

Extraordinary gain and loss

            

Extraordinary gain:

            

Gain on sales of stock in subsidiaries

   2,632       2,632

Extraordinary loss:

            

Less from impairment of stock and other investment in subsidiaries

   10,627        

Expense from reorganization of the building materials business

   3,868       14,495

Income before income taxes

           34,100

Income Taxes:

            

Current

   12,950        

Deferred

   (559 )     12,390

Net Income

           21,709

Unappropriated retained earnings carried forward

           4,578

Interim dividends

           4,022

Unappropriated retained earnings at end of the period

         ¥ 22,266

 

Proposed Appropriations of Unappropriated Retained Earnings

 

     (In yen)

Unappropriated retained earnings at end of the period

   22,266,178,027

Reversal of reserve for general reserve

   10,000,000,000

Total

   32,266,178,027

Proposed appropriations

    

Cash dividends (¥3.00 per share)

   4,022,202,696

Transfer to reserve for special depreciation

   55,058,254

Unappropriated retained earnings to be carried forward

   28,188,917,077

 

Significant accounting policies

 

1. Valuation of securities

 

Securities of subsidiaries and associated companies are valued cost determined by the moving average method. Marketable securities are valued at their fair values, which are determined at fiscal year end. Unrealized holding gains and losses on marketable securities are excluded from earnings and are reported as a separate component of shareholders’ equity. Gains and losses on sales of marketable securities are computed based on the moving-average cost method. Non marketable securities are valued at cost, which is determined by the moving-average method.

 

2. Valuation of inventories

 

Finished goods and work-in-process which are manufactured under specific production orders are stated at cost on the specific identification method. Other inventories are stated at cost determined by the moving average method.

 

3. Depreciation of property, plant and equipment is computed using the declining-balance method.

 

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4. Allowance for doubtful receivables is stated in amounts considered to be appropriate based on the company´s past credit loss experience and an evaluation of potential losses in the receivables outstanding.

 

5. Reserve for product warranties are determined based on an analysis of the historical data of costs to perform under product warranties.

 

6. Liabilities for severance payments to the employees are stated at an amount computed under an actuarial method. The amount is calculated as the projected benefit obligation and fair value of plan assets.

The unrealized prior service costs and actuarial loss are being amortized using the straight-line method over the participants’ average remaining service period. The actuarial gains and losses are being amortized using the declining-balance method over the same period.

 

7. Liabilities for severance payments to the members of the board are stated at the amount that would be required if all members of the board retired at the balance sheet date. These liabilities are regulated by Article 43 of the Commercial Code Enforcement Regulation.

 

8. Allowance for losses from guarantees of loans is computed at the estimated losses relating to the guarantee rendered. This allowance is regulated by Article 43 of the Commercial Code Enforcement Regulation.

 

9. Consumption taxes receivable and payable are accounted for on the net of tax method.

 

10. From the current business term, financial statements, etc. have been prepared in accordance with the Ordinance for Enforcement of the Commercial Code of Japan as amended by the “Ordinance to partly amend the Ordinance for Enforcement of the Commercial Code of Japan” (Ordinance of the Ministry of Justice, No. 68, September 22, 2003).

 

Notes to Balance Sheet


    

1. All figures are rounded down to the nearest million yen.

    

2. Short-term receivables from subsidiaries

   ¥120,463 million

Long-term receivables from subsidiaries

   ¥41,903 million

Short-term payables to subsidiaries

   ¥38,194 million

Long-term payables to subsidiaries

   ¥16 million

3. Accumulated depreciation for property, plant and equipment

   ¥362,338 million

4. In addition to the Property, Plant and Equipment on the balance sheet, the Company leases certain metal patterns for production use and computers and peripheral equipment under lease agreements.

    

5. Notes discounted

   ¥1,413 million

Loans guaranteed

   ¥8,968 million

6. With regard to the sale of ductile iron straight pipe in Japan, the Company received a surcharged order of ¥7,072 million from the Fair Trade Commission based on the Anti-Monopoly Law on December 24, 1999. In an effort to appeal, the Company has filed a petition for the initiation of hearing procedures. As a result of the decision to begin the procedures, afore-mentioned surcharge order had temporarily been suspended; however the hearing on the surcharge is again under progress.

    

7. The restriction amount for divendends is regulated by Article 124-3 of the Commercial Code Enforcement Regulation. The amount of net assets that increased due to the current price evaluation of marketable securities is 54,730 million yen.

    

Notes to Statement of Income


    

1. All figures are rounded down to the nearest million yen.

    

2. Transactions with subsidiaries:

    

Sales to subsidiaries

   ¥128,364 million

Purchases from subsidiaries

   ¥76,759 million

Other transactions with subsidiaries

   ¥737 million

3. Net profit per share

   ¥16.16

Note to Proposed Appropriations of Unappropriated Retained Earnings


    

1. Interim dividends in the amount of ¥4,022,371,329 (¥3.00 per share) were paid on December 10, 2003.

    

 

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INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT

 

May 17, 2004

 

To the Board of Directors of Kubota Corporation

 

          Tohmatsu & Co.
         

Representative Partner,

Engagement Partner,

Certified Public Accountant:

Nobuhide Doira

 

         

Representative Partner,

Engagement Partner,

Certified Public Accountant:

Seiichiro Azuma

 

         

Engagement Partner,

Certified Public Accountant:

Koichiro Tsukuda

 

Pursuant to Article 2-1 of the “Law Concerning Special Measures under the Commercial Code with respect to Audit, etc. of Corporations (Kabushiki-Kaisha)” of Japan, we have audited the balance sheet, the statement of income, the business report (with respect to accounting matters only), the proposed appropriations of retained earnings and the supplementary schedules (with respect to accounting matters only) of Kubota Corporation for the 114th fiscal year from April 1, 2003 to March 31, 2004. The accounting matters included in the business report and supplementary schedules referred to above are based on the Company’s books of account.

 

These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management.

 

Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit.

 

We conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in Japan. 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 audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion. Our audit includes auditing procedures applied to subsidiaries as considered necessary.

 

As a result of our audit, in our opinion,

 

  (1) The balance sheet and the statement of income present fairly the financial position and the results of operations of the Company in conformity with the applicable laws and regulations of Japan and the Articles of Incorporation,

 

  (2) The business report (with respect to accounting matters only) presents fairly the Company’s affairs in conformity with the applicable laws and regulations of Japan and the Articles of Incorporation,

 

  (3) The proposed appropriations of retained earnings are in conformity with the applicable laws and regulations of Japan and the Articles of Incorporation, and

 

  (4) The supplementary schedules (with respect to accounting matters only) present fairly the information required to be set forth therein under the Commercial Code of Japan.

 

Our firm and the engagement partners do not have any financial interest in the Company for which disclosure is required under the provisions of the Certified Public Accountants Law.

 

The above represents a translation, for convenience only, of the original report issued in the Japanese language.

 

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Transcript Copy of Audit Report of the Board of Corporate Auditors

(Translation)

AUDIT REPORT

 

In respect of the execution of duties of the Directors during the 114th fiscal period commenced on April 1, 2003 and ended on March 31, 2004, we, Board of Corporate Auditors, having been reported by each Corporate Auditor on auditing method and the results thereof and following the discussion among us, have prepared this audit report and hereby report as follows:

 

1. Summary of the auditing method employed by each Corporate Auditor:

 

Each Corporate Auditor has conducted its audit in accordance with the auditing policy and allotment of duties as determined by the Board of Corporate Auditors.

 

  (1) As for audit with respect to accounting, we have reviewed the accounting books and documents, examined the accounting statements and their supplemental schedules, heard from the independent public accountants of their plans and procedures of the audit, attended from time to time the performance by the independent public accountants of their audit, and requested their report on the results of their audit during and at the end of the fiscal period and at any other times whenever deemed necessary.

 

  (2) As for audit with respect to business operations (other than accounting), we have attended the meetings of the Board of Directors and other important meetings, received reports on the operations of the Company from the Directors and employees in charge of the operations, reviewed important documents including those requiring approval of the executives, inspected the operations and the financial conditions of the head office and other principal offices and plants, requested reports on the operations of the subsidiaries when necessary, and conducted such other investigations as we considered necessary.

 

  (3) As for competitive business by the Directors, transactions between the Company and the Directors, the free distribution of profits made by the Company, the extraordinary transactions between the Company and any of its subsidiaries or any shareholders, and the Company’s acquisition of its stock as treasury and disposal thereof, we have examined them in detail, in addition to our audit mentioned above, by inspecting the records of the related transactions held by relevant divisions, attending the meetings of the examination committee regarding expenditures, requesting such committee reports on each payment, as well as hearing from the persons concerned as we deemed necessary.

 

2. Results of the audit:

 

  (1) We have found that the auditing method employed by Tohmatsu & Co., independent public accountants, and the results thereof are appropriate and sufficient.

 

  (2) We have found that the business report presents fairly the current position of the Company in conformity with applicable laws and regulations and the Articles of Incorporation.

 

  (3) In the light of the financial conditions of the Company and other circumstances, we have found that there is no matter to be remarked in the proposed appropriations of unappropriated retained earnings.

 

  (4) We have found that the supplemental schedules to the accounting statements present fairly the matters to be described therein and nothing has come to our attention which should be specifically noted herein.

 

  (5) With respect to the execution of duties of the Directors including those related to the Company’s subsidiaries, we have recognized no improper conduct nor any material breach of applicable laws and regulations and the Articles of Incorporation.

 

As for competitive business by the Directors, transactions between the Company and the Directors, the free distribution of profits made by the Company, the extraordinary transactions between the Company and any of its subsidiaries or any shareholders, and the Company’s acquisition of its stock as treasury and disposal thereof, we have recognized no violation of duties by any Director.

 

May 20, 2004

 

The Board of Corporate Auditors

Kubota Corporation

Masayoshi Fujita

Standing Corporate Auditor

Masamichi Nakahiro

Standing Corporate Auditor

Susumu Sumikura

Standing Corporate Auditor

Teisuke Sono

Corporate Auditor

 

(Note)  Masayoshi Fujita, Standing Corporate Auditor, Teisuke Sono, Corporate Auditor, are the outside corporate auditors as provided for in Paragraph 1, Article 18 of the “Law Concerning Special Measures under the Commercial Code with respect to Audit, etc. of Corporations (Kabushiki-Kaisha)” of Japan.

 

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Table of Contents

REFERENTIAL MATERIALS FOR EXERCISE OF VOTING RIGHTS

 

1. Number of voting rights held by shareholders     
     1,334,740

 

2. Subjects for discussion and referential materials

 

1st Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning approval of proposed appropriations of unappropriated retained earnings for the 114th period. Proposed appropriations of unappropriated retaind earnings were in consideration of the retirement of the treasury stock. Details are shown on page 17.

 

With regard to dividends, we would like to propose the year-end dividends of ¥3.00 per share, the same as the previous year, making the aggregate amount of dividends per year of ¥6.00 per share including the interim dividends already paid.

 

2nd Subject for discussion:

 

Amendments to the Articles of Incorporation

Outline of and reason for the amendments:

 

Amendments to Take Advantage of Revision of the Commercial Code of Japan

 

The “Law Amending the Commercial Code of Japan and the Special Exceptions to the Commercial Code of Japan Regarding the Audit of Kabushiki Kaisha (joint stock corporations)” (Law No. 132, 2003) took effect on September 25, 2003. It permits acquisition of treasury stock by a resolution of a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company if the Articles of Incorporation has a clause authorizing such a resolution. The proposed amendments are to take advantage of the said amending Law and to set forth new Article 6 (Acquisition of treasury stocks) in the Articles of Incorporation to allow the Company to implement a capital policy even more effectively.

 

As a result of the said setting forth of a new Article, Article 6 and subsequent Article numbers of the present Articles of Incorporation shall be moved down by one. Details of the amendments mentioned above are as follows:

 

(Underlining indicates portions changed.)

 

Current Articles


  

Proposed amendments to the Articles


(New text)    Article 6 (Acquisition of treasury stock) The Company may acquire treasury stock under Article 211-3, clause 1, paragraph 2 of the Commercial Code of Japan by a resolution of a meeting of the Board of Directors.
Article 6 (The number of shares constituting one unit of stock and no issuance of shares held in numbers less than one unit of stock)    Article 7 (The number of shares constituting one unit of stock and no issuance of shares held in numbers less than one unit of stock)
(Omitted)    (Titles and provisions remain unamended)
Article 30 (Transfer agent of foreign currency denominated bonds)    Article 31 (Transfer agent of foreign currency denominated bonds)
(Omitted)    (Titles and provisions remain unamended)

 

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Table of Contents

3rd Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning election of 20 directors.

 

All of directors will expire at the conclusion of this Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders.

 

Therefore, it is proposed to elect 20 directors.

 

The following persons are recommended as candidates for directors:

 

Candidate
Number


 

Name (Birthday)


  

Number of
Company Shares
Owned


  

Brief Occupational History

(including responsibilities in other companies)


1   Daisuke Hatakake    30,000 par value    April, 1964;   Joined the Company
    (June 29, 1941)    Shares    December, 1998;   General Manager of Corporate Planning & Control Dept.
         of the Company    June, 1999;   Director of the Company
              June, 2000;   In charge of Compliance Auditing Dept., Business Alliance Dept.(assistant), Corporate Information Systems Planning Dept.(assistant), General Manager of Corporate Planning & Control Dept.
              August, 2000;   In charge of PV Business Planning & Promotion Dept.
              June, 2001;   Managing Director of the Company, in charge of Corporate Planning & Control Dept. and Finance & Accounting Dept.
                 
                  In charge of Corporate Information Systems Planning Dept. (assistant)
              June, 2002;   General Manager of Corporate Compliance Headquarters
              April, 2003;   President & Representative Director of the Company (through now)
2   Tomomi Soh    34,000 par value    April, 1962;   Joined the Company
    (May 2, 1939)    Shares    June, 1993;   Director of the Company
         of the Company    January, 1996;   General Manager of International Operations Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
              October, 1996;   General Manager of Engine Division
              June, 1998;   Managing Director of the Company
              April, 2000;   In charge of Engine Division
              June, 2000;   Executive Managing Director of the Company, General Manager of Pipe & Fluid Systems Engineering Consolidated Division
              October, 2001;   In charge of Materials Division
              July, 2002;   General Manager of Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division
              April, 2003;   Executive Vice President and Representative Director of the Company, Tokyo Office (through now)
              April, 2004;   GM of Sales & Marketing (through now)
3   Mikio Kinoshita    39,000 par value    April, 1963;   Joined the Company
    (May 31, 1939)    Shares    October, 1992;   General Manager of Tractor Division
         of the Company    June, 1994;   Director of the Company
              April, 1998;   General Manager of R&D Headquarters in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
              June, 1998;   Managing Director of the Company
              October, 1999;   In charge of R&D Headquarters in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
                 
              April, 2000;   In charge of Farm Machinery Division
              June, 2000;   Executive Managing Director of the Company,
                  General Manager of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division, General Manager of International Operations Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
              April, 2003;   Executive Vice President and Representative Director of the Company, in charge of Research & Development Planning & Promotion Dept. (through now)
                 
              April, 2004;   GM of Research & Development (through now)
4   Akio Nishino    22,000 par value    April, 1966;   Joined the Company
    (March 14, 1941)    Shares    February, 1991;   General Manager of Incinerator Engineering Dept.
         of the Company    June, 2000;   Director of the Company, Deputy General Manager of Environmental Engineering Division
                 
              April, 2001;   General Manager of Solid Waste Engineering Division
              June, 2002;   Managing Director of the Company, Deputy General Manager of Environmental Control Plant Consolidated Division, General Manager of Water Environmental Engineering Division
                 
              April, 2003;   General Manager of Environmental Control Plant Consolidated Division, General Manager of Tokyo Office (through now)
              April, 2004;   Executive Managing Director of the Company, in charge of Tokyo Administration Dept., Chairman of Kubota Construction Co., Ltd (through now)
                 
5   Yoshihiro Fujio    17,000 par value    April, 1967;   Joined the Company
    (September 6, 1944)    Shares    December, 1998;   General Manager of FA Sales Dept.
         of the Company    June, 2000;   General Manager of Electronic Equipped Machinery Division, General Manager of Kyuhouji Plant
                 
              June, 2001;   Director of the Company, in charge of Human Resources & Labor Relations Dept. (assistant)
                 
              June, 2002;   In charge of Personnel Dept., General Manager of Head Office (through now)
              October, 2002;   In charge of Environmental Protection and Health & Safety Promotion Dept. (assistant)
                 
              April, 2003;   Managing Director of the Company, in charge of Secretary & Public Relations Dept.
              April, 2003;   In charge of Health & Safety Planning & Promotion Dept. (through now)
              December, 2003;   In charge of Housing & Building Materials Business Coordination Dept.
              April, 2004;   Executive Managing Director of the Company, General Manager of Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division (through now)
                 
              June, 2004;   General Manager of Cooperation Dept. in Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division (through now)
                 

 

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Table of Contents
6   Moriya Hayashi   23,000 par value   April, 1969;   Joined the Company
    (May 7, 1944)   Shares   June, 1999;   President of Kubota Tractor Corporation
        of the Company   June, 2001;   Director of the Company
            October, 2001;   Deputy General Manager of Tractor Division
            January, 2002;   General Manager of International Operations Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division. (through now)
               
            April, 2003;   Managing Director of the Company, General Manager of Tractor Division
            April, 2004;   Executive Managing Director of the Company, General Manager of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division (through now)
               
7   Akira Seike   17,000 par value   April, 1965;   Joined the Company
    (January 27, 1943)  

Shares

of the Company

  October, 1996;   Deputy General Manager of Sales Headquarters in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division,
                General Manager of Sales Planning Dept. in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
            March, 1999;   Ditto and General Manager of Agricultural Cooperative Sales Promotion Dept. Division
               
            April, 2000;   General Manager of Farm Machinery Division
            June, 2000;   Director of the Company
            October, 2001;   General Manager of Tractor Division
            June, 2002;   In charge of Farm Facilities Division,
                General Manager of Sales Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division (through now)
               
            April, 2003;   Managing Director of the Company (through now)
            April, 2004;   In charge of Farm Machinery Division (through now)
8   Tadahiko Urabe   23,643 par value   April, 1966;   Joined the Company
    (October 26, 1943)   Shares   April, 1999;   General Manager of Sales Dept. (Water Supply Market) of
        of the Company       Plastic Pipe Division
            October, 1999;   General Manager of Planning Dept. of Plastic Pipe Division
            June, 2000;   General Manager of Plastic Pipe Division (through now)
            June, 2001;   Director of the Company
            April, 2004;   Managing Director of the Company (through now)
9   Toshihiro Fukuda   22,000 par value   April, 1969;   Joined the Company
    (October 12, 1945)  

Shares

of the Company

  December, 1998;   General Manager of Coordination Dept. in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
          October, 2001;   Deputy General Manager of Sales Headquarters in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division and General Manager of Sales Coordination Dept. in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division
               
               
            June, 2002;   Director of the Company
            March, 2003;   In charge of Related Products Division
            April, 2003;   General Manager of Farm Machinery Division
            April, 2004;   Managing Director of the Company, in charge of Corporate Compliance Headquarters, Environmental Protection Dept., General Affairs Dept. (through now)
10   Yasuo Masumoto   15,000 par value   April, 1971;   Joined the Company
    (April 21, 1947)   Shares   April, 1999;   General Manager of Utsunomiya Plant
        of the Company   October, 2001;   General Manager of Farm Machinery Division
            June, 2002;   Director of the Company
            April, 2003;   General Manager of Production Control Headquarters of Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division (through now)
               
            April, 2004;   Managing Director of the Company, in charge of Manufacturing Planning & Promotion Dept. (through now)
               
            June, 2004;   General Manager of Purchasing Dept. in Industrial & Material Systems Consolidated Division (through now)
               
11   Junichi Maeda   11,000 par value   September, 1972;   Joined the Company
    (May 23, 1945)   Shares   June, 2000;   General Manager of planning Dept. of Ductile Iron Pipe Division
        of the Company   April, 2001;   Ditto and General Manager of Production Management Dept of Ductile Iron Pipe Division
               
            April, 2003;   General Manager of Ductile Iron Pipe Division (through now)
            June, 2003;   Director of the Company (through now)
12   Yoshiharu Nishiguchi   15,000 par value   April, 1970;   Joined the Company
    (January 29, 1947)   Shares   July, 1998;   General Manager of Accounting Dept.
        of the Company   June, 2000;   General Manager of Finance & Accounting Dept.
            December, 2002;   General Manager of Compliance Auditing Dept.
            June, 2003;   Director of the Company, in charge of Air Condition Equipment Division, Corporate Planning & Control Dept., Finance & Accounting Dept. (through now)
               
               
            April, 2004;   In charge of Septic Tanks Division, Housing & Building Materials Business Coordination Dept., Secretary & Public Relations Dept., PV Business Planning & Promotion Dept. (through now)
               
               
13   Eisaku Shinohara   15,000 par value   April, 1974;   Joined the Company
    (August 25, 1947)   Shares   June, 1999;   Deputy General Manager of Construction Machinery Division,
        of the Company       General Manager of Vehicle Technology Generalization Dept.
            June, 2000;   General Manager of Construction Machinery Division and General Manager of Planning Dept. of Construction Machinery Division
               
            October, 2001;   Deputy General Manager of R&D Headquarters in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division, General Manager of Vehicle Technology Generalization Dept.
               
               
            June, 2003;   Director of the Company (through now)
            April, 2004;   General Manager of R & D Headquarters of Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division (through now)
               

 

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14   Nobuo Izawa   8,000 par value   April, 1971;   Joined the Company
    (February 28, 1948)   Shares   April, 1998;   General Manager of Sales Dept. I of Pumps Division
        of the Company   June, 2001;   General Manager of Pumps Division (through now)
            April, 2002;   Ditto and General Manager of Planning Dept of Pumps Division
            June, 2003;   Director of the Company (through now)
15   Yoshihiko Tabata   17,000 par value   April, 1976;   Joined the Company
    (March 23, 1946)   Shares   April, 1998;   President of Kubota Engine America Corporation
        of the Company   October, 2003;   General Manager of Engine Division (through now)
16   Kazunobu Ueta   3,000 par value   April, 1969;   Joined the Company
    (January 1, 1947)  

Shares

of the Company

  October, 1996;   General Manager of Planning & Sales Promotion Dept. in Farm Machinery Division
          April, 2000;   Deputy General Manager of Sales Headquarters in Farm & Industrial
                Machinery Consolidated Division (through now)
            April, 2004;   Related Products Division (assistant), General Manager of Sales Control Dept. in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division (through now)
               
17   Takashi Shoji   4,000 par value   April, 1971;   Joined the Company
    (June 17, 1947)   Shares   June, 1996;   General Manager of Incinerator Plant Sales Dept.
        of the Company   April, 2001;   General Manager of Sales Dept. I of Solid Waste Engineering Division
            April, 2002;   General Manager of Solid Waste Engineering Division
            April, 2004;   Ditto and General Manager of Water Environmental Engineering Division
            June, 2004;   General Manager of Waste Engineering Division (through now)
18   Tokuji Ohgi   6,000 par value   April, 1972;   Joined the Company
    (July 25, 1947)   Shares   June, 2001;   General Manager of Human Resources & Labor Relations Dept.
        of the Company   April, 2003;   General Manager of Secretary & Public Relations Dept.
            April, 2004;   In charge of Personnnel Dept., Environmental Protection and Health & Safety Promotion Dept. (assistant)
               
19   Morimitsu Katayama   16,000 par value   April, 1963;   Joined the Company
    (January 17, 1948)   Shares   April, 1999;   General Manager of Construction Machinery Manufacturing Dept.
        of the Company       in Hirakata Plant
            October, 2001;   Ditto and General Manager of Construction Machinery Division
            April, 2003;   General Manager of Sakai Plant (through now)
            April, 2004;   General Manager of Manufacturing Headquarters in Farm & Industrial Machinery Consolidated Division (through now)
               
20   Nobuyuki Toshikuni   8,000 par value   April, 1973;   Joined the Company
    (January 30, 1951)   Shares   April, 1999;   General Manager of Tractor Engineering Dept.
        of the Company   April, 2001;   President of Kubota Tractor Corporation
            April, 2004;   General Manager of Tractor Division (through now)

 

Note: None of the candidates have special interest in the Company.

 

4th Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning election of 1 corporate auditor.

 

To strengthen the function for inspection of the auditor, it is proposed to elect 1 corporate auditor newly.

 

This Subject for Discussion was made in accordance with the agreement of the Board of Corporate Auditors.

 

The following person is recommended as candidate for 1 corporate auditor:

 

Name and date of birth


  

Resume and representation of other companies/institutions


  

Shares of the
Company’s stock
owned


Yoshiro Suekawa

(September 1, 1937)

   October 1959    Joined Robingham and Lucky Accounting Firm (subsequently, Aoyama Audit Corporation)    0 share
   October 1963    Registered with the Japanese Institute of Certified Public Accountants   
   July 1984    Joined Sanwa Audit Corporation, Tokyo Marunouchi office (currently, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu)   
   May 1989    Assumed the office of Managing Partner of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu   
   June 2002    Retired from the office of Managing Partner of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu   
   July 2002    Established Suekawa Certified Public Accountant Office (through now)   
   June 2003    Assumed the office of a statutory auditor of Kabushiki Kaisha Sasutech (through now)   
   April 2004    Appointed as a special visiting professor, the Faculty of Commerce, Doshisha University (through now)   

 

Note: The candidate does not have special interest in the Company.

 

5th Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning payment of retirement allowances to the retiring directors.

 

Directors, namely Messrs. Tsuyoshi Hayashi, Masaru Ishiguro, Toshiyuki Yotsumoto, Tadahiko Kinoshita and Masateru Yoshikawa will retire from their post at the conclusion of this Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders, when their terms of office will expire.

 

It is proposed that retirement allowances be paid to them for their meritorious services rendered to the Company during their terms of office and the amount be within a reasonable amount with due consideration of the Company’s standard and precedent.

 

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It is proposed that definite amount date and method of payment of such allowances for the directors be left to the discretion of the Board of Directors.

 

The brief occupational history of the retiring directors are as follows:

 

Name


  

Brief Occupational History


Tsuyoshi Hayashi

   June, 1998;    Director of the Company
     June, 2000;    Managing Director of the Company
     April, 2003;    Executive Managing Director of the Company (through now)

Masaru Ishiguro

   June, 2000;    Director of the Company
     April, 2003;    Managing Director of the Company (through now)

Toshiyuki Yotsumoto

   June, 2000;    Director of the Company
     April, 2003;    Managing Director of the Company (through now)

Tadahiko Kinoshita

   June, 1998;    Director of the Company
     June, 2001;    Managing Director of the Company
     April, 2003;    Executive Managing Director of the Company
     December, 2003;    Director of the Company (through now)

Masateru Yoshikawa

   June, 2001;    Director of the Company (through now)

 

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June 25, 2004

 

To: Shareholders

 

       

Daisuke Hatakake

President and

Representative Director

KUBOTA Corporation

2-47, Shikitsuhigashi

1-chome Naniwa-ku, Osaka

 

Resolution of the Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders

 

We take pleasure in informing you that the followings were duly reported and resolved at the 114th Ordinary General Meeting of Shareholders held on June 25, 2004 as follows:

 

Matters reported

 

Balance sheet as of March 31, 2004 and the statement of income and the business report for the 114th period (from April 1, 2003 to March 31, 2004).

 

Contents of these documents were duly reported.

 

Matters resolved

 

1st Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning approval of proposed appropriations of unappropriated retained earnings for the 114th period.

The above proposal was approved and passed as proposed. With regard to dividends for the period, the year-end dividends were ¥ 3.00 per share.

 

2nd Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning partial amendment to the Articles of Incorporation.

The above proposal was approved and passed as proposed. The summary of the amendments are as follows.

 

  1. Amendment to acquisition of treasury stock by a resolution of a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company

 

3rd Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning election of 20 directors.

Twenty persons, namely Messrs. Daisuke Hatakake, Tomomi Soh, Mikio Kinoshita, Akio Nishino, Yoshihiro Fujio, Moriya Hayashi, Akira Seike, Tadahiko Urabe, Toshihiro Fukuda, Yasuo Masumoto, Junichi Maeda, Yoshiharu Nishiguchi, Eisaku Shinohara and Nobuo Izawa were re-elected, and six persons, namely Messrs. Yoshihiko Tabata, Kazunobu Ueta, Takashi Shoji, Tokuji Ohgi, Morimitsu Katayama and Nobuyuki Toshikuni were newly elected. All these elected assumed their offices respectively.

 

4th Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning election of 1 corporate auditor.

One person, namely Mr.Yoshio Suekawa was newly elected.

He assumed his office. Mr. Yoshio Suekawa is the outside corporate auditor as provided for in Paragraph1, Article 18 of the “Law Concerning Special Measures under the Commercial Code with respect to Audit, etc. of Corporations (Kabusiki-kaisha)”of Japan.

 


Table of Contents

5th Subject for discussion:

 

Matters concerning payment of retirement allowances to the retiring directors.

It was approved that retirement allowances be paid to the retiring directors, namely Messrs. Tsuyoshi Hayashi, Masaru Ishiguro, Toshiyuki Yotsumoto, Tadahiko Kinoshita and Masateru Yoshikawa. It was approved that the amount of such allowances be within a reasonable amount with due consideration of the Company’s standard and precedent. It was approved that definite amount, date and method of payment of such allowances for the retiring directors be determined at the discretion of the Board of Directors.

 

Board of Directors and Corporate Auditors (as of June 25, 2004)


Daisuke Hatakake

  

President and Representative Director

Tomomi Soh

  

Executive Managing Director and Representative Director

Mikio Kinoshita

  

Executive Managing Director and Representative Director

Akio Nishino

  

Executive Managing Director

Yoshihiro Fujio

  

Executive Managing Director

Moriya Hayashi

  

Executive Managing Director

Akira Seike

  

Managing Director

Tadahiko Urabe

  

Managing Director

Toshihiro Fukuda

  

Managing Director

Yasuo Masumoto

  

Managing Director

Junichi Maeda

  

Director

Yoshiharu Nishiguchi

  

Director

Eisaku Shinohara

  

Director

Nobuo Izawa

  

Director

Yoshihiko Tabata

  

Director

Kazunobu Ueta

  

Director

Takashi Shoji

  

Director

Tokuji Ohgi

  

Director

Morimitsu Katayama

  

Director

Nobuyuki Toshikuni

  

Director

Masayoshi Fujita

  

Corporate Auditor

Masamichi Nakahiro

  

Corporate Auditor

Susumu Sumikura

  

Corporate Auditor

Teisuke Sono

  

Corporate Auditor

Yoshio Suekawa

  

Corporate Auditor

 


Table of Contents

June 25, 2004

 

To whom it may concern

 

Kubota Corporation

 

2-47, Shikitsu-higashi 1-chome,

 

Naniwa-ku, Osaka 556-8601, Japan

 

Contact: IR Group

 

Finance & Accounting Department

 

Phone: +81-6-6648-2645

 

Notice on repurchase of share on market

 

Please be advised that Kubota Corporation (“the Company”) resolved at the board of directors’ meeting held on June 25, 2004 that the Company would execute repurchase of its shares on market, pursuant to Article 211-3, Paragraph 1, item 2 of the Commercial Code.

 

1. Purpose for the repurchase of shares

 

To enable the Company to have flexibility on shareholders’ equity

 

2. Details of repurchase of shares

 

1) Type of shares to be acquired:

   Shares of common stock of the Company     

2) Number of shares to be acquired:

   Not exceeding 30.0 million shares     

3) Total amount of shares to be acquired:

   Not exceeding ¥18.0 billion     

4) Schedule of repurchase:

   From June 28, 2004 to September 27, 2004     

 

(REFERENCE)

 

1) Number of shares issued as of May 31, 2004 excluding treasury stock: 1,340.7 million shares

 

2) The number of treasury stock: 69.1 million shares

 

End of document

 


Table of Contents

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

        KUBOTA CORPORATION
Date: July 1, 2004      

By:

  /s/    SHIGERU KIMURA        
           

Name:

  Shigeru Kimura
           

Title:

 

General Manager

Finance & Accounting Department