Thanks for the heads up on Bloomberg. I've been ignoring all of the copyright stuff and just posting articles here. I don't really think that these free sites mind much <G>.
Nasdaq Japan to Start From June 2000, Part of OSE (Update1) Nasdaq Japan to Start From June 2000, Part of OSE (Update1) (Changes first sentence; adds comments from president of Softbank.)
Tokyo, Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Nasdaq Japan, the Japanese version of the dealer-run Nasdaq stock market in the U.S., will begin trading by mid-2000, six months earlier than planned. It will be part of the Osaka Securities Exchange.
Earlier this year the U.S. National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), which owns Nasdaq, and Softbank Corp., Japan's largest investor in Internet-related ventures, agreed to bring Nasdaq to Japan.
The NASD-Softbank alliance and the Osaka exchange signed an agreement today under which Japan's second largest stock exchange will provide surveillance, trade settlement, and company-listing services for Nasdaq Japan. Osaka's backing will allow trading of newly public Japanese companies and Nasdaq-listed U.S. companies with Japanese units to start next June or July, said NASD chairman Frank Zarb. ``This moves to a much earlier date the interlinking of pools of liquidity so U.S. companies can be exposed to investors outside the country, and non-U.S. companies can be exposed to investors in the U.S.,' he said Thursday.
Without the involvement of Osaka, or any other established Japanese exchange, NASD-Softbank would have had to set up its own dealers association. That would have taken more time.
Establishment of the exchange will trigger an ``unprecedented rush in public stock offerings,' Masayoshi Son, Softbank's president, told reporters Friday in Tokyo.
Softbank is Japan's largest distributor of software and computer technology publications. The company controls the Japanese operations of E*Trade Group inc., the No. 2 U.S. online brokerage, and Yahoo Inc., a global Internet media company.
Growing Competition
Nasdaq, the second largest U.S. stock market, would be the first American market to open in Japan. The venture is also another step in Nasdaq's efforts to compete with the New York Stock Exchange and electronic trading networks such as Datek Online Holdings Corp.'s Island by moving toward round-the-clock trading in international stocks.
Unveiled last June, Nasdaq Japan was to have started trading at the end of next year. Its introduction was moved up, in part, in response to the Tokyo Stock Exchange's opening of a new market for Internet start-up companies on Wednesday, Zarb said. ``Competition's a pretty good motivator,' he said.
The Tokyo `Mothers' market, which stands for the Market of High-growth and Emerging Stocks, has the most lenient listing requirements of all Japanese markets, making it a haven for young companies in need of capital.
Two Internet-related startups - Liquid Audio Japan and Internet Research Institute -- listed their shares on the Mothers this week. Today, Liquid Audio traded for the first time, rising to 6.12 million ($59,000) yen, more than double its offer price of 3 million yen. Internet Research didn't trade, though it was bid to 29.5 million yen, more than double its IPO price of 11.7 million yen.
Liquid Audio Japan is a maker of software to download music from the Internet. Internet Research provides technical support for Internet systems.
Mutual Access
While buying and selling on Nasdaq Japan initially will take place during regular Japanese trading hours, the market eventually plans to offer extended-hours trading.
Nasdaq Japan's promoters envision mutual access to each others' markets among participants in Nasdaq markets in Japan, Europe and the U.S., while Nasdaq Japan is also expected to become a central market for trading Southeast Asian stocks, Son said in Tokyo.
The memorandum of understanding between the Osaka market and the Nasdaq Japan Planning Co., a company formed by Nasdaq and Softbank to plan the new market, followed six months of talks, Zarb said.
Osaka's computerized trading systems will be used in part by the new market starting in the middle of next year, though a new trading system is to be phased in by early 2001.
Prospective Listings
About a dozen U.S. companies with Japanese units have expressed interest in being listed on Nasdaq Japan, though Nasdaq plans to approach many more, Zarb said. By the end of September, Nasdaq also expects to have the Japanese IPOs that have been trading in Japan offered for trading in the U.S., he said.
Softbank plans to take many of its group companies public on Nasdaq Japan, including the joint venture with NASD that will operate the market. Some Softbank companies may de-list from other exchanges, Son said.
The remainder of the original Nasdaq-Softbank plan that was announced earlier this year remains intact. Between 50 and 100 of the largest Nasdaq stocks will be offered for trading on Nasdaq Japan by the end of next year. Trading on Nasdaq Japan would be handled by U.S. and Japanese dealers for possibly 20 hours a day -- closing only between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. New York time (6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Tokyo time).
Eventually, all 5,000 Nasdaq stocks -- including technology giants such as Microsoft Corp., Intel Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. -- could be traded 24 hours a day.
Nasdaq and Softbank, each of which owns half of Nasdaq Japan, will offer equity in the new market to broker-dealers in the U.S. and Japan next year. |