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To: LOGAN12 who wrote (4105)2/24/2000 5:41:00 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 6020
 
One from "WSJ Japan". Last paragraph says much about our Son's understanding of what matters.

Thursday, February 24, 2000
ANALYSIS: Nasdaq Japan To List Start-Ups As Well As Big Firms

TOKYO (Nikkei)--Nasdaq Japan, a new stock exchange to be set up this year, will list not only the stocks of start-up businesses but also those of foreign-affiliated companies and large, unlisted Japanese firms. The bourse is based on the Nasdaq market in the U.S.

At a seminar held by Nasdaq Japan Planning Co. on Feb. 23, two start-up businesses -- DIP and Jive Media Inc. -- declared their intention to list on the new market. The seminar attracted more than 1,000 investors.

DIP designs content for information terminals installed in convenience stores, while Jive Media sells computer software to small and midsize companies over the Internet.

Nasdaq Japan regularly holds seminars to match investors and start-ups in a wide variety of business areas including information technology, retailing and manufacturing, and DIP and Jive are only two of the nearly 60 companies that have participated in such seminars.

It also holds the seminars to help start-ups go public, hopefully on the new market.

Nasdaq Japan also plans to list domestic subsidiaries of foreign companies, with Nihon Cisco Systems K.K. expected to be the first to take the plunge.

Shares of big companies will also be traded. Of the some 100 companies expected to debut on the new market in the first year, 10% will be big, unlisted firms having strong earnings bases, according to Nasdaq Japan Planning.

The participation of creditworthy companies will help improve the credibility of the new market, Tatsuyuki Saeki, president of the planning firm, says.

In contrast, the three companies listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange's new market, called Mothers, are all information technology-related start-ups.

Nasdaq Japan appears likely to combine features of the TSE's first section and Mothers by listing companies in various sectors and sizes.

Masayoshi Son, president of Softbank Corp. (9984) and the driving force behind Nasdaq Japan jointly with the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), which runs the Nasdaq stock market in the U.S., stresses the scheme is aimed at creating a fair and high-quality stock market.

(The Nihon Keizai Shimbun Thursday morning edition)



To: LOGAN12 who wrote (4105)2/24/2000 5:45:00 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 6020
 
Another from WSJ. Any money streaming out of the Dow and bonds in the US and the JGB in Japan is going to be good for us, as long as NASDAQ holds.

Japan Becomes Mecca
For Venture Capitalists
By BILL SPINDLE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

TOKYO -- Japan isn't exactly known as a land of entrepreneurs. But the country has suddenly become a hot spot for venture capitalists who have high hopes that it's on the way to becoming one.

In recent months, major players in the U.S. private-equity and venture-capital market have arrived in Tokyo in droves, some of them making substantial investments. They include:

GE Capital Corp. teaming up with Daiwa Securities Group Inc. to launch a 20 billion yen ($180.4 million) fund, which could eventually grow as large as 100 billion yen, aimed at investing in unlisted companies.

A $200 million investment by U.S. venture-capital firm J.H. Whitney & Co. and PSINet Inc., the U.S. Internet-access provider, in a local "incubator" aiming to nurture Internet venture businesses in Japan.

A 30 billion yen fund, run jointly by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Kyocera Corp. aimed at high-tech companies.

The new funds show foreigners are more optimistic than they've been in years, not only over prospects for entrepreneurship in Japan, but also for foreign capital playing a role in developing it. "There's a new Japanese economy ... that gives foreign investors much more hope than ever before," said Goldman Sachs Japan President Mark Schwartz upon launching his company's fund. Warburg Pincus and Patricof & Co. have also opened operations in Japan in the past year.

Home-grown companies such as Hikari Tsushin Inc. and Softbank Corp., however, are also rapidly expanding their activities in funding and nourishing venture businesses in Japan, particularly those related to the Internet.

Softbank, for example, recently decided to launch a 50 billion yen fund. Demand from investors was so strong, however, that it grew into a 150 billion yen fund, the largest Internet fund on record. Softbank, which is putting in about onethird of the money, plans to invest in about 1,500 companies. And even old-line investment funds such as Jafco Co., which has generally steered clear of outright start-ups, is beginning to invest more in younger companies.

Foreign or domestic, these venture capitalists see more Japanese economic and social trends moving in their direction than has been the case in decades. Labor mobility is increasing. Regulations are loosening. Capital markets are beginning to welcome start-up companies. Even the government has jumped on the venture-capital bandwagon, after waking up a few years ago to the fact that Japan's existing companies simply won't be able to employ enough workers to keep the economy humming.

Overall, money available in Japan for private-equity investment climbed to at least $25.5 billion last year, compared with about $17.8 billion in 1995, according to Asia Private Equity Review, an industry newsletter. But those figures underestimate the explosive growth in the past several months because they don't include firms such as Warburg Pincus, which are actively looking for investments in Japan although the company doesn't have a dedicated Japan fund. "Now the growth is much faster," says Kathleen Ng, publisher of the newsletter.

Venture capitalists with experience in the U.S. say they are starting to see tangible signs that entrepreneurship is gaining a foothold in Japan. Some relish, for example, the steady exodus of talent that prestigious consulting and financial firms are experiencing as top Japanese talent opts for the Internet. McKinsey & Co., for example, lost a senior consultant who now runs an Internet auction site called Bidders.co.jp, and Japan's largest Internet shopping mall is run by a former executive from the Industrial Bank of Japan Inc. In the U.S., such defections were one of the first signs that venture businesses were becoming accepted places for the nation's best and brightest to seek their fortunes.

Challenges remain. Investors say there still aren't enough good business ideas backed by strong executives. The two new stock markets aimed at listing venture companies are still question marks: The just-launched Mothers exchange, which is part of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, has listed only three companies, and Nasdaq Japan doesn't open until later this year.

Still, investors say the Internet and other changes in Japan's economy are bringing a younger group of managers to the fore, and they are eager to please shareholders-an attitude that has long been missing in Japan. Karl Fooks, vice president of J.P. Morgan's International Capital Corp. in Asia, is cautious yet bullish. He says J.P. Morgan could invest between $50 million and $100 million in Japan this year, most likely in $3 million to $5 million chunks, to spread out the risk.

"It's so new that we would never want to concentrate our investment," he says. "You're better off investing in a network of related companies."



To: LOGAN12 who wrote (4105)2/24/2000 5:57:00 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6020
 
And, finally, the fundamentals are good and trending up ...

Nielsen//NetRatings Releases First Japan Net Usage Survey
By William Auckerman
Japan Correspondent, asia.internet.com
[February 15, 2000--TOKYO] At the end of 1999, Japan had an Internet market of over 15 million active users, far outstripping all other Internet economies of the Asia-Pacific region.

This was the finding of the first Nielsen//NetRatings survey of Japanese Internet usage, conducted jointly by ACNielsen Japan and NetRatings Japan.

The survey also found that the Japanese Internet market is underpinned by a strong 13 percent household penetration rate.

According to Nielsen//NetRatings, this puts Japan on a par with Taiwan (14 percent penetration rate) and Hong Kong (16 percent), though still far behind Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore (nearly 30 percent).

With 15.38 million users, however, the Japanese Internet market is 70 percent larger than the combined markets of these five leading Asia-Pacific economies (about 9 million in total).

The survey, conducted in November and December 1999, was based on phone interviews with 54,627 households selected by random digit dialing (from about 346,200 calls made to phones nationwide in cities and towns of 10,000 or more inhabitants).

"Businesses and advertisers, here and elsewhere, have always wanted to get a clear picture of the Internet user market in Japan," said Tatsuzo Uewaki, an executive director of ACNielsen Japan.

"We now have it," Uewaki declared of the Nielsen//NetRatings survey results, adding that "the numbers position Japan comfortably among the leading Internet economies."

The survey found that of the 32 percent of the households who own a personal computer, about 45 percent - or 13 percent of all households - have Internet access.

Meanwhile, about 4 percent of households reported owning an Internet-capable cellular phone.

One-third (33 percent) of the survey respondents said they access the Internet both from home and from outside (such as at work or school) within the previous month. Almost one-quarter (23 percent) said they get online only from home, while 44 percent said they access the Net only from outside the home.

Consistent with regional trends, the survey found that males dominate Japan's Internet audience, accounting for 63 percent of users.

The gender gap is most pronounced among those who access the Internet both from home and from outside (73 percent male, 27 percent female).

Uewaki said this survey was the first step by ACNielsen and NetRatings to present accurate and reliable data on Internet usage in Japan.

By the end of the year, Nielsen//NetRatings will expand its services from Internet audience measurement to research on Japanese e-commerce, Internet investment, and Internet media strategies.



To: LOGAN12 who wrote (4105)2/24/2000 8:30:00 PM
From: Robert Sheldon  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 6020
 
*Also, Bill Seidman (sp?) from CNBC, was talking about the deal with Nippon Credit today with great enhusiasm today. He spoke very favorably about Softbank and the empire it was building.*

Bill is one of the more intelligent folks in the US business community when it comes to corporate & economic strategy. I was absolutely surprised to see his ringing endorsement of our friends at SoftBank, and that he actually understood SoftBank as a company. I say this because even though SoftBank has begun to get significant press, the crowd still has not caught on. They are probably frantically chasing down Bill tonight for more information.

Now that the respected "brains" on the street are making these sorts of comments, we are sure to see more demand for the shares.