News On Japan

Investors seek to break through Japan Inc's 'value trap'

Apr 20, 2023 (financialpost.com) - Corporate governance in Japan has suddenly become a cause celebre, rousing the world’s third-largest stock market out of decades of lethargy and drawing in hordes of foreign investors.

Japan’s stock market has long been seen by investors as a ‘value trap’ where companies focus on market share, hoard cash and care little about shareholder returns.

While there has long been talk of change, 2023 has seen some real evidence of a shift. One such example was when the board of 75-year old elevator maker Fujitec Co Ltd ousted its chairman last month, handing a huge victory to activist investors.

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The Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) is forcing reform, too, threatening companies with underperforming stocks to demonstrate a better use of capital or face being delisted.

What has forced investors globally to sit up and take notice is an endorsement from legendary billionaire investor Warren Buffett. Buffett’s firm Berkshire Hathaway Inc increased its stake in Japan’s five largest trading houses and said he may invest more in the country.

“The worm has clearly turned in Japan,” said Simon Edelsten, manager of UK-based Artemis’s global select strategy fund. “For the Tokyo Stock Exchange to say that all companies that trade below book are going to have to do something about it is a massive change, a big step up.” ...continue reading

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A powerful earthquake registering a maximum intensity of 6 upper on Japan’s seismic scale struck Aomori Prefecture at around 7:30 a.m. today. According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, the epicenter was off the coast of Iwate Prefecture, with a depth of about 50 kilometers. The earthquake’s magnitude was estimated at 6.9.

As of 5 a.m. on June 25, Typhoon No. 7, Mekkhala, was south of Okinawa, moving slowly north with strong intensity, and is expected to move north east of Miyakojima in Okinawa Prefecture later in the day before passing west of Okinawa’s main island, bringing storm-force winds and heavy rain. Typhoon No. 8, Higos, located farther east of the Philippines, is not expected to develop significantly.

The sale of religious corporations that operate temples and shrines across Japan is drawing growing scrutiny from authorities, who fear the transactions could be used for tax evasion and money laundering, as brokers openly advertise properties and corporate status for tens or even hundreds of millions of yen.

Nine Japanese nationals were among 17 people detained in Laos on suspicion of involvement in a special fraud operation, while Japanese authorities have sought cooperation from Cambodian police over dozens of Japanese citizens believed to have gone missing after traveling to Cambodia.

Japan will begin a new system on June 23 to sell paint and thinner directly from manufacturers to construction firms and other businesses, aiming to ease supply bottlenecks and curb price increases as worsening conditions in the Middle East make such materials harder to obtain.

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