News On Japan

Hedge funds, go home: Japan is closing the door

May 18, 2020 (Japan Times) - Japan is casting an even wider protectionist net to shield its big companies.

It has less to do with defending against unsolicited overtures into strategic assets than with squeezing out troublesome foreign investors. The moves will strangle what’s left of the drive to reform corporate governance and undermine long-suffering households as an economic crisis takes hold.

On May 8, Tokyo laid out details of new rules that restrict overseas investment through amendments to its Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act, in a bid to preserve industries in the interest of national security. A so-called core list includes giants like Toyota Motor Corp. and SoftBank Group Corp. that amounts to 40 percent of the Topix index by market capitalization. The government also spelled out much-awaited exemptions that establish whether outside investors are subject to the rules. The effect is to add onerous hurdles to what had been an open market, nearly one-third owned by foreigners who account for most of the daily turnover, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The changes underscore Japan’s sharp retreat from the encouraging reforms undertaken since 2015. They had been succeeding. Shareholder proposals for auditor or director changes were up, as were returns. Hedge funds such as Dan Loeb’s Third Point LLC and Paul Singer’s Elliott Management Corp. have all had their eyes on the likes of Sony Corp. and SoftBank. On Tuesday, London-based activist Asset Value Investors Ltd. took on elevator- and escalator-maker Fujitec Co. to improve governance and returns. A fairly liquid market had meant foreigners could choose where they put their money without needing to consider the extra layer of regulations for participation and if companies were subject to them. Now, under the new rules taking effect June 7, any overseas investor who wants to build a stake of more than 1 percent needs to notify regulators, a severe tightening from the previous 10 percent. Who wants to seek approval well before investing and be hamstrung on timing?

Most foreign money managers will have blanket exemptions, but they must comply with certain conditions. The caveats effectively shut out activists: Investors can’t become board members and they can’t propose spin-offs at general shareholder meetings.

Other large managers can be exempted if they don’t join board committees or issue written proposals with deadlines. Otherwise, they can go big. Tokyo is signaling that it wants passive investors to hold up its market, very little accountability and to give Japanese companies a heads-up if cantankerous hedge fund action is coming.

Ostensibly, the rules are meant to protect national security. They’re in line with the global trend to strengthen measures for screening foreign direct investments, according to the Finance Ministry. But they also include operators of hot springs and makers of fountain pens. In reality, the list is a way to disregard governance oversight. The wide reach of the law is telling: Of the 10 largest companies on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, seven fall into the core category. Health care and pharmaceutical companies, which currently have a small weight, are expected to be added as the importance of the viral outbreak increases. That’s also a sector hedge funds are active in.

COVID-19 is already pushing Japan’s big, cash-hoarding companies into self-preservation mode and is benching activists. Earnings per share are expected to decline by as much as 18 percent over the next fiscal year, with Goldman Sachs foreseeing extraordinary losses to total ¥8 trillion ($74 billion) over fiscal 2019 and 2020. The new rules will make this worse, dashing the prospects of change at progressive companies that might have been willing to take certain types of activist hedge funds onto their boards.

News On Japan
POPULAR NEWS

Japan's environment and weather authorities have issued heatstroke alerts for a record 19 prefectures for July 15, warning that dangerous heat is expected to create an extremely high risk of heatstroke, including the first such alerts this year for the Kanto region.

Japan has become an unexpected base of operations for Russian intelligence agents since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, with spies allegedly using the country to procure and smuggle high-tech equipment and other goods to Russia, The New York Times reported on July 12.

Convenience store operators in Japan are strengthening safety measures as bear-related damage grows more serious, with Lawson expanding the use of bear repellent spray and considering drone-based remote monitoring.

Osaka’s Minami district, now entering another period of major change with the planned opening of the Naniwasuji Line, the redevelopment of Midosuji and improvements around Nankai Namba Station, has transformed from an area once described as "scary" and "dirty" into one of Japan’s leading tourist destinations.

A 10-ton hoko float was pulled through central Kyoto on July 12 in a trial run ahead of the Yamahoko Junko procession during the Gion Festival's early parade.

MEDIA CHANNELS
         

MORE Society NEWS

A 44-year-old man arrested after four people were injured in a knife attack in Saiki, Oita Prefecture, has told investigators in effect that "anyone would do," suggesting the victims were chosen at random, investigative sources said.

A woman arrested on suspicion of sewing shut the lips of a woman she lived with in Koga, Ibaraki Prefecture, has denied the allegation, telling investigators she has no recollection of the incident.

A 37-year-old gang member known in Tokyo's Kabukicho district by the nickname "Crazy" has been arrested on suspicion of robbing and injuring a teenage girl near Shinjuku Station after threatening her with what appeared to be an ice pick.

A wild boar repeatedly charged at a man on the grounds of a food service company in Toyota, Aichi Prefecture, on July 13, injuring two people before being captured about an hour and a half later.

Two men died on July 11 in separate water accidents in Aichi and Gifu prefectures, including an Indonesian man who apparently drowned after jumping into a waterfall basin and a fisherman swept away while trying to recover his fishing gear.

An unauthorized Islamic prayer hall has been built on land in Kawagoe, Saitama Prefecture, where new construction is generally prohibited, prompting the city to order the landowner to remove the structure.

Three men have been arrested on suspicion of preparing to rob a home in Saitama City after police found new face masks and crowbars hidden in shrubbery at a coin-operated parking lot.

Empress Masako harvested wild silk cocoons at the Imperial Palace on July 9, continuing the long-standing sericulture tradition passed down through generations of empresses since the Meiji era.