Japan FinTech Observer #43

Japan FinTech Observer #43

Welcome to the forty-third edition of the Japan FinTech Observer.

According to Teikoku Databank , the number of bankruptcies during the 2023 calendar year was 8,497, over 2,000 more than the previous year. For the second year in a row, the number of bankruptcies increased from the previous year, and approached the number in 2015 (8,517). This was the highest annual increase since the burst of the bubble economy.

At the same time, the Nikkei notes that Japan's ranks of financially unsound "zombie" companies swelled about 30% on the year to an 11-year high of around 250,000 in fiscal 2022 as businesses kept afloat through the pandemic by government support now grapple with heavy debt loads. Just over 17% of businesses are unable to cover interest payments on their debt from their profits, thus being categorized as "zombies". Letting these companies meet their fate would have a greater impact on providing opportunities to startups than any amount of subsidies would. Just let the market work its magic.

This week, the Bank of Japan's Monetary Policy Meeting (MPM) takes place, with the BOJ's outlook report due on Tuesday, January 23. Expect no change in the Bank's bias.

The live edition of the Japan FinTech Observer, taking a deeper dive into select topics, will be hosted at its usual time on Tuesday, starting 5pm JST, on LinkedIn Live . Last week's recording is available on the Tokyo FinTech YouTube channel .

Here is what we are going to cover this week:

  • Venture Capital & Private Markets: Football star Keisuke Honda sets up $100 million Japan VC fund; Sakana AI have raised $30M in a seed funding round; Trinity Technology completed its Series B, including 18 financial institutions; Mitsui made a USD 50m investment in Quantinuum; Mizuho extends JPY 2bn loan to Elephantech; the Development Bank of Japan has partnered with Seiko Epson to buy into 3DEO; SBI Investment leads, and Nippon Express participates in Indian logistics startup WIZ's Series B round; and SBI-invested German FinTech Pliant extends funding round
  • Banking: The Philippines’ Tonik, about 10% owned by Mizuho through an investment in 2022, entered SME lending
  • Payments: The Southern Japanese city of Kumamoto now allows tram passengers to pay with their faces using facial recognition technology from?Saffe
  • Capital Markets & Asset Management: MUFG has formulated an asset management business strategy, it wants to double AUM by FY2029; Nikko Asset Management aims for the same by 2032; and Mizuho wants to double its AUM within 10 years as well; Jefferies Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group will expand their partnership to Europe; and the Tokyo Stock Exchange has published the first monthly edition of its highly anticipated status of disclosure on “Action to Implement Management that is Conscious of Cost of Capital and Stock Price”
  • Digital Assets: Klaytn Foundation and Finschia Foundation have submitted a proposal to merge the two blockchains to create Asia’s Web3 technological and ecosystem powerhouse
  • The Last Word: Nobody has a clue


Venture Capital & Private Markets


Banking


Payments

  • The Southern Japanese city of Kumamoto now allows tram passengers to pay with their faces using facial recognition technology from?Saffe ; the Kumamoto City Transportation Bureau commenced the face payment pilot on December 20, allowing passengers to register through the Quick Ride or Bankit mobile apps; the test will run until the end of March 2024


Capital Markets & Asset Management

  • The Tokyo Stock Exchange has published the first monthly edition of its highly anticipated status of disclosure on “Action to Implement Management that is Conscious of Cost of Capital and Stock Price”; the TSE states that as of December 31, 2023, 49% of Prime Market listed companies (815) and 18% of Standard Market listed companies (300) have disclosed information on their plans; that count, however, includes those companies that have measures "under consideration"; given that the listed companies had nine months to prepare, we would rather conservatively go with the 40% and 11.5% numbers, respectively, of those companies that have actually disclosed


Digital Assets


The Last Word: Nobody has a clue

Our thanks go to Harald Berlinicke for pointing out some interesting market commentary and context on Japanese stocks in the latest Bank of America research piece "The Flow Show: Rising Suns & Setting Suns", published on January 18, 2024, and delivering the quote of the week:

  • Nikkei at 34-year highs, China at 2008 GFC lows (Chart 2 – Nikkei was 7k at GFC low, now 36k)
  • True bull in Japan when yen ?? up, stocks up, but in ’24 it is prospect of deeper yen depreciation that fires up the bulls ??
  • Leadership shifting from asset reflation plays i.e. banks to weak yen plays i.e. exporters
  • Nikkei beneficiary of ABC "anywhere but China" liquidity
  • Investors structurally underweight (Japan = 5.5% of ACWI vs. 44% in 1989 – Chart 3)

The research piece includes an interesting quote from an unnamed global investor on Japanese stocks: "Foreign brokers tell me Nikkei in '24 will do what Nvidia did in '23, while Japanese brokers tell me Nikkei will do what China did in '23".

Basically, nobody has a clue where things are headed for Japanese stocks (the Chinese stock market fell by some 30% last year whereby Nvidia rose by some 170%). ??


If you would like to see more of our content, please head over to the Tokyo FinTech YouTube Channel or check out the eXponential Finance Podcast .

We have also created two LinkedIn groups, the "Japan Startup Observer " if your interest in Japan goes beyond FinTech, and the "FinTechs of India " to capture the developments on the subcontinent. We invite you to join both these groups.

Have an awesome week ahead.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了